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UCSB LIBRARY ESSAYS ON THE AS EXEMPLIFIED IN ITS -. * DEADLY HOSTILITY 7O THE BAXK OF THE FJVITED STATES, AND IN THE ODIOUS CALUMNIES EMPLOYED FOR ITS DESTRUCTION. BY ARISTIDES. " What profits all the ploughman's skill and pain, and brambles choke the rising grain 7 What force havn laws to make the people blest, If factious spirits do the State molest?" If tares PHILADELPHIA: JESPEK HABDISO, PHINTEB. 1835 DEDICATION. I INSCRIBE THESE ESSAYS TO THE HONEST AND JUST MEN OF THE REPUBLIC, BY WHATEVER PARTY NAME DESIGNATED. To OTHERS, THEY WILL, OF COURSE, BE AS "SOUNDING BRASS, OR TINKLING CYMBAL." ARISTIDES. PREFACE. I HAVE a few words to read these essays. to say to the reader before he begins find in them, some severity, but He will no rancour; a free handling of the parties, but no malice. My position will be found to resemble that of the surgeon. He probes the ulcer exposes its corroded and corroding parts, for the purpose of seperating His object healthful. 1st. 2d. is them from the sound and sometimes two-fold: To save the subject. To prevent the spreading . of the leprons-like disease, and thereby rescue society from its distressing effects, I have not much hope of succeeding under the first similitude. My main object is, I confess, to save the yet uncontaminated citizens of the country from the fatal effects of following the example set by those actors, whose conduct I have exposed. 1 hold it to to human be as dangerous to our liberty, as is the cholera would, it is true, delight in restoring them, as individuals, to those honourable political relations, which all just men maintain, towards our common country, who I life. prefer that country, and its prosperity, to party and the "general welfare," to their individual preferment. I sincerely wish they would abandon their reckless course, turn their backs upon the arch-enemy of all that is dear to the Republic and its hopes, and practice those lessons which were be- queathed ever, to us little If these by the Father of his Country. I have, how- hope. men suffer by the exposure which these essays make of their conduct, they will bear in mind that no one is to blame for it but themselves. They are supposed to be free agents. When they consented to come in contact with the loathsome cause of their present condition, they did it voluntarily. They doubtless weighed well the ignominy IV that they were destined to endure, and balanced against it the "rewards'" which prompted them to the sacrifice. They preferred to endure the former, rather than forego the latter. wash my hands of having, directly or indirectly, encouraged one of them to place himself in the condition in which the reader will find them all. Let me, therefore, not be blamed. These men are alone responsible. They chose their present condition, (humiliating enough, in all conscience,) and are entitled to all the honour it confers, and to all the disgrace. I The reader is now respectfully requested to pass on, and at the picture view; and if, does not turn from take is my look which the following essays will expose to his the whole of it, he after he shall have surveyed word for it it in deep sorrow for his country, that his moral vision is defective, he may and not right with himself. ARIST1DES all ESSAYS No. 1. DESIGN under this head, to make an appeal to the intelligent and candid of all parties, on that which may, perhaps, I seem to them. many, at the first blush, as not concerning any of But let no man, or corporation, pass the subject over because calumny has carried its end in proof the Bank of the United States, (or rathe downfal ducing ther in defeating its recharterj) that therefore the truth, touching this whole business, is not to be regarded, and its lightly, or think, solemn injunctions noted. The very success of a calumny is the very reason why it should be exposed, and why those who have been calumny not (and who its victims should be vindicated. to carry its be regarded ; but it will have this has been misled by acting under its its it of should success should rouse every man, effect it, The failure might be a reason why ends, on every honourable man) own conduct when to vindicate his influence, by hurling back upon its authors such a judgment of condemnation as will make them pause at least, before they venture again thus wilfully to delude, and thus murderously to destroy. Is it said by the designing and wicked, that a citizen is rabid and shall men who have confidence in the declaration, seize and confine the victim, and shut him out from light and and shall it be liberty, and there keep him until he dies ; proven afterwards, to the satisfaction of all parties, that the charge was groundless, and that it was made for personal or vindictive ends, or both, and then because the man is dead, be permitted to those who thus wickedly destroyed him, to go, not only unpunished, but unrebuked? Yet this is the doctrine of those who say, because the Bank has been run shall it down by calumny, there is no need of exposing that calumny, from the foul, but too sucreputation and its from the no less officers enemies; or of vindicating cessful attacks of its foul .designs their " good upon its name." been an unholy war waged, and with the of unholiest purposes, and prosecuted with a spirit diabolical and If there ever has fiend-like, the Bank it has been the war waged by Jacksonism of the United States. demonstrate It will be my against business to All that relates to this subject, this. now is now speak. The days of trick, and deception, and chicanery, are gone by. The Bank, so long and so shamefully abused, may be considered as out matter of Facts must history. of the question. It is with the living, vindictive actors, the From Levi Woodbury, down to the spies, the subject may now be handled without creating suspicion The that selfishness or personal or political objects govern. heartless politician, the fool and the knave, must now come in The curtain will be for their share of glory and of shame. Let those who have played their parts, take the conlifted. public have to do. Infamous deeds should be recorded, and their sequences. authors held up to merited public execration and contempt. ARISTIDES. No. The election of General Jackson, to the Presidency opened have demonstrated, a fearful era, the history of the Government. His utter incompetency a new, and, in 2. as the results for the place, his habits, his passions all conspired to make than a suitable person to fill an office so His very presence in high, so dignified, and so responsible. him any thing else that lofty place, operated as the signal for the profligate of the elements of discord. The unprincipled all parties to stir of every party were seen wending their way to the presence chamber, there to offer the incense of their flattery, and to ask for the " rewards" for which they had been struggling; whilst others, just escaped from the throes of sudden conversions, knelt also before the throne, to receive from the hands of him who some crumbs of favour. Very soon " General that after, the proclamation was formally issued, his enemies." Jackson will reward his friends, and punish He sat upon it, proceeded as the world knows, to fulfil this proclamation, to the letter. Here, then, for the first time in this free country, was witnessed the alarming spectacle of an open perversion of all that had been held sacred in the doctrines of republicanism. An ukase had been issued; and for the constitutional exercise of the freedom of opinion, and the exercise of the elective franchise, the great body of the freemen of America, including the most wise, and the most virtuous, were proscribed! Such a perversion of Executive authority, and such a prostration all that was just and right, whilst it alarmed the friends of constitutional liberty, served but to rally the wicked, the profligate, and the irresponsible of every party. They beheld in of Andrew Jackson, the very elements upon which alone they could operate, when it was resolved by the leaders to employ them, and to use him, to perpetuate "the party," and secure to themselves the honours and emoluments of office. High-handed and oppressive as were those measures, it had not yet entered into the head of even the most abandoned of the party, to conceive that such outrages would be committed Not a man of them dreamed, that, standing upon Executive ground, General Jackson would order a solemn compact between the United States and a corporation to be as followed. violated ; seize the public treasure, wrest it from the place where the laws had assigned it; and that too, on his own "reand that he would sanction the use of the sponsibility;" public money, as has been done through the Post Office, and employ the patronage and power of the other departments of the Government to perpetuate "the party" Nothing- of all this was thought possible. Reckless as the leaders were even then, such high-handed measures, if mentioned, made them tremble. would have 8 The question, at the period of which I am writing, was " where shall we realize the monied power, to secure to ourselves and our successors, the places we now occupy, and to our party its perpetuation?" As was natural, perhaps, the 3 eyes of the leaders were turned to [df THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES. It was the great monied power of the Union. Its five hundred Its branches were in many of the States. officers were looked upon as having power and influence. These it was thought indispensable to secure. Already possessed of the patronage of the Government, which, it was settled, it should be faithfully employed in behalf of " the party" to secure the Bank, when all would be well. remained only How to accomplish this, was the question. before an opening presented itself. " had in New mouth, have at its It was not long The Branch at Ports- Hampshire, originally the misfortune to head a Mr. Cutts, who ended by defrauding the United States of upwards of g20,000 of the pension fund, which the Bank was obliged to replace; and in other respects had become so deranged, as that " of $5460,000 of It was at this loans, $148,000 was thrown under protest." " the a but that not calculated man, President, worthy period 7 for such a state of things, resigned his place.' Now, who would have thought that the appointment of a successor, and such a man, too, as Jeremiah Mason, would be seized upon as a pretext for feeling how far the party might its affairs calculate upon the co-operation of the Bank of the United States in confirming its power and perpetuating its existence? I venture to say, that, except with the actors in this nefarious scheme, such a thought would have occurred to no man. It was seen that, in righting the condition of the Bank, Mr. Mason would have, of necessity, to act with decision and firmness. In doing this, he must, as President of the Board, ocin all proceedings which were required cupy a foremost place to reinstate the Bank in its former prosperous condition. This would of course involve an obligation to move upon the parties to -the $112,000 then under protest, and others, perhaps, beside these, might have felt, incidentally, this new but necessary action for the recovery and preservation of the funds of the Bank. Here, then, was the field in which the seeds 9 for a and personal hostility were and when the crop ripened, and after examination of its condition, Levi Woodbury and Isaac a large crop of sown. full Into this dissatisfaction field, " the Hill, choice spirits of party," entered. moment. The administration at Washington be firmly Now was the was thought to and whatever it might indicate to the Bank was hoped would be cheerfully responded to. settled as its wish, it was necessary, at all hazards, to make -the trial. And now, reader, I am going to disclose an act on the part of Woodbury, which I will call the first embodied calumny that "the party" hurled at the Bank; a calumny in the formation of which there is as much coward duplicity and profligacy, and personal degradation, as has ever attached to any It man of the party since. Availing themselves of the state of things as they existed between the Bank and its dealers, Woodbury and Hill proit was easy for them to do under such circumstances,) the signatures of some forty or fifty persons to a petition for the removal of Mr. Mason ; and for the appointment of such cured (as a board as the petition named. But this was not all. Mr. Woodbury took upon himself to acts. particular part, which, as long as he lives, will operate to degrade him in the estimation of every honest man; and will have the further effect to tarnish his honour in the view of posterity. What was that act? To write, I answer, two letters one to Mr. Biddle, President of the United States Bank, in which he presents himself as brooding, most disinterestedly over the interests (excluding political considerations from the subject,) of that institution; whilst, perhaps with the same pen, he wrote a "confidential" letter to Mr. Ingham, then Secretary of the Treasury, in which he says: "The new President of the Bank at this place, (Portsmouth, New Hampshire,) Jeremiah Ma- a particular friend of Mr. Webster and his (JQ23 POLIMr. WebTICAL CHARACTER is doubtless well known to you. ster is supposed to have had much agency," &c. &c. Here, son, is ; " then, in this confidential" letter to Mr. Ingham, the removal of Mr. Mason is placed, by the writer, on political grounds; whilst, in his letter to Mr. Biddle, he places 2 it upon 10 " the charges against him grounds wholly different, and says, Mr. Mason) originated exclusively with his political friends! next, (that there may be no cavil on this suhfrom both these letters; and from them extracts ject,) publish " which was to see further illustrate the design of "the party I will, in my Bank might be counted on as a subservient tool hands of those men, who sought its agency to promote " the curtain I have said their own selfish -and party ends. how far the in the shall be lifted," and it shall be. ARISTIDES. No. I have shown what encouraged the profligate of all parties around Gen. Jackson and also their design in doing They derived their encouragement from their knowledge to rally so. 3. ; that Gen. Jackson had no one qualification for the office to which he had been elected, and that his prejudices and passions made him the fit instrument for their stratagems and Having secured his mandate, proscribing all except members of " the parly^ and become possessed of the offices, and the press, the concluding part of the design was to get wiles. This could be done, only, as the public possession of the Bank. offices had bedti secured by putting tools into them. The who might not be of "the he reformed out, and Jackson men put in when the monied power would be united with the patronage Presidents, Cashiers, Directors, &c., party," were to ; of office and the press, and then, as the torrenrsweeps down all before it, it was calculated to devastate every party, and fragment of party, save "the party." That was to be made invincible. Hence, as I have shown in my last No., the movement upon the New Hampshire Branch. But my partiwith Mr. Woodbury, at the time States Senator from New Hampshire, and now cular business in this No. United is Q^J Secretary of the Treasury. I have said, that this poli- functionary took upon himself to act a particular part ; and that, in acting that part, he descended from the level of tical 11 honourable conduct, and has made himself hateful nest men. I proceed his double-faced letters. bury wrote From On the 27th June, 1829, Mr. from Wood- Mr. Ingham, then Secretary of the Treasury. to that letter I make the following extracts EXTRACT "The to all ho- to furnish, as promised, extracts : 1. President of the Branch at this place, (Portsmouth) was changed and the salary greatly increased; both which measures have last year, given much dissatisfaction, as well to the public, as to holders." many of the Stock- REMARKS. Now, here are two 1st. as Mr. Biddle, he received the " confi- distinct falsehoods in his reply to Mr. Ingham. of whom dential letter of Mr. Woodbury, says : : " The President of the not changed. The late President, Mr. Shapley, voluntarily declined serving, without the slightest intimation Bank was of a wish on the part of the Bank, and solely, as he stated, 'in consequence of his advanced age and declining health, together with his close confinement to the great measure, 2d. " The office, which prevents in a " his attention to his private business.' Salary of the new President was not increased a dollar." any candid man, who is in his senses, answer, whether he believes a word about the "dissatisfaction" that Mr. Woodbury asserts was felt by the public, and many of the stockholders ? At least on account of the only reasons he Now then, let assigns for it. A-} '. ',.'.- EXTRACT "The new Webster, and his political character Webster is 2. is a particular friend of Mr. doubtless well known to you. Mr. President, Jeremiah Mason, supposed to is have had much agency in effecting the change." REMARKS. Here aimed a clear and undisguised avowal that the writer Mr. Mason by a political onset. It was him " a particular friend of for this object to style is to displace sufficient Mr. Webster." That was the drop relied upon according to 12 the proclamation of Jackson, which promised rewards to his friends, and punishment to his enemies, to poison the subject of the onset, and secure the agency of the administration at Washington in procuring from the mother bank an order for Mr. Mason's expulsion meanwhile, Mr. Woodbury's cohad submitted a list of names for ; operating friend, Isaac Hill, Directors and a President. It so happens that the supposition of Mr. Woodbury that Mr. Webster had much agency in effecting the change," had as little grounds to rest upon as had his more formal defl clarations touching the changing of the Presidency, and the " Mr. increase of the salary, for Mr. Biddle says ebster had not the slightest agency in obtaining for him (Mr. Mason) the appointment. His nomination was resolved upon without : W the knowledge either of Mr. Webster or Mr. Mason." After remarking further upon Mr. Mason's unfitness for the office of President, Mr. Woodbury discloses the object, and says: EXTRACT 3. "If any relief can be afforded by the selection of different directors for this Branch, as any board without him (Mason) in it, or with him not at Us head would at once furnish relief." REMARKS. No doubt. Put out capable and honest men, and put in Jackson men, and the sought for relief would have been instantly experienced, since that much of the Bank of the United States, according to the plan (and which, 1 assert was matter of canvass in a Jackson caucus at Washington} TO SECURE THE BANK, would have become the instrument of "the party.' And this was the object of this letter writer, and in his conscience he knows it and whether that monitor be sufficiently elastic, pressed upon as it has so long been, and 1 '' ; as it yet is by the lumber of party, and the employment it demands, the day will come when the light breaking in upon it from a throne higher than that on which Gen. Jackson sits, will give to it life and energy, and a power to its sting which no mortal agency can resist or destroy. 13 now to the correspondence between the same Levi and Woodbury, upon the same subject, with Mr. Biddle. On the same 27th day of June, 1829, the former addressed the latter a letter. That letter is not published, nor have I seen I turn But its character may be inferred from Mr. Biddle's reply Mr. Ingham, touching Mr. Woodbury's "confidential" " I am letter to Mr. Ingham. He says surprised that Mr. it. to : should consider the complaints about Mr. Mason, as having the remotest connexion with politics, and I am Woodbury Mr. Woodbury wrote to you on surprised for this reason, the 27th June, on the same day he wrote a similar letter me 1 to . I answered, thanking him requesting him to guide my for his suggestions, inquiries, by stating and what was To this the nature of the complaints against Mr. Mason. he replied on the 3d instant, and that letter has the following declaration " From the confidential : character of this letter, it is due in perfect frankness to state, that the President of the present board, as a politician, is not very acceptable to (J^/* the majority in this town and state it is at the same time notorious that the charges against him, in his (j* But, present office, originated EXCLUSIVELY WITH HIS FRIENDS." REMARKS. clear, than, that in his letter to Mr. Biddle, Mr. Woodbury spoke not a word about except perhaps to give to Mr. Biddle the assurance Nothing is more of the 27th June, politics that politics had nothing to do with his request for the removal of Mr. Mason, but only the welfare of the Bank, and this he abundantly confirms in his letter of the 3d, when he says, "the charges (of course all of them) originated exclusively with Mr. Mason's jriends. They could not therefore have been political. So then we find Levi Woodbury in one letter to "the Government" plying political reasons for the removal of Mr. Mason and in another of the same date, to the Presi; dent of the Bank, reasons wholly distinct, and relating to any thing and every thing but politics ! ! ! And now let me ask the reader what he thinks of a man who would thus employ his high station in attempting a double injury to his fellow, by making him first obnoxious to a domi- . .nant party, on political grounds; and secondly to his employers, on grounds relating to their pecuniary interests 1 Does it not robbery? And to robbery of plundering a man of his "good name?" approximate most fearfully to the the worst kind to But the end to be accomplished by these nefarious means, skulking and lurking after men's character, is a thousand this fold more shocking than are the means for its accomplishment. That end was the subversion of a great moneyed institution, established and conducted with a sole view to the fiscal concerns of the country, and the advancement of the general prosperity, and a converting it into a political engine, for the purpose of making permanent the very worst political dynasty that has ever cursed any Country. I shall show in my next that simultaneous movements were made upon two other Banks, one in the. South and the other After that I will in the West, and in what these resulted : return to Mr. Woodbury, and show the result of the examination into to have Mr. Mason's satisfied the conduct, which ought, (but did not,) most impudent defamer under the sun. ARISTIDES. No. When 4. Mr. Ingham, moved upon by Woodbury, as I have shown, opened correspondence with Mr. Biddle, hi 1829, on the alleged maladministration of the Branch at Portsmouth, he had been reached by charges of a like character, his 4i Complaints," he says, in his implicating other Branches. " of a similar nature have also letter of the llth July, 1829 been suggested from other places, particularly Kentucky and Louisiana." This reveals the plot. If the onset had been confined to the Branch at Portsmouth, there might be some reason to under honest, suppose that those who conducted it acted see political partisans, we when mistaken But views. though as in the case of Woodbury, plying upon the administration similar charges, implicating other and distant Branches, we are 15 into forced the conclusion, that the attacks wewj not but that they were the result of party only premeditated, deliberations, and contemplated the same end, which was t* in possession, through the put the dominant, or Jackson party, of'subservient political agents, of the monied power agency f the coUhtty. Or, if the charges implicating those Branches were not conclusively proved to be false, we might then infer, on the face that, however apparent concerted action might be of the proceedings, that still those who made might have done so under erroneous impressions. to the clear evidence of a concert of action, is the fact that the charges were false, there is the charges But when superadded no escaping the conclusion that they were made for political effect, and to bring the branches attacked into subserviency to the party making them. I will state from document No. 121, published by Congress, made against the Kentucky Branch, The Pre" I John Tilford, in his letter to Mr. Biddle, says the charges sident, : my duty inform you, that, within the two last days, a most shameful attempt has been, made to induce the public think to it to believe that the officers of this Branch were influenced by political considerations in making loans." Here we have The Woodbury it. slang all over. The a statement printed in the Lexington Observer, in terms the most unequivocal, the truth of the charge. denied, " The That statement says charge attempted to be made is, that the board required that the politics of the party apdirectors, in : plying (for discount) should be known to them, and that if they belonged to the Jackson party, their applications were rejected. In this state of the case, what proof can be offered to the public of the utter falsity of such a charge 1 Certainly the best evidence is the testimony of those members of the board who are themselves stipporters of the present (Jackson) adAn array of names, sufficient to put down ministration" is published and among these are letters from Mr. Robert J. Ward, Mr. Joseph Bruen, and Mr. Benjamin Taylor, who are known, says the statement, as supporters of any calumny, General Jackson. 16 Mr. Ward " I have been a director during the present year, and have no hesitation in declaring that I have never known an instance where the political opinions of the : says applicant had the remotest influence upon the directory, in granting, or refusing a loan. On the contrary, I have believed, and always so stated, that the board of directors were entirely impartial, and that loans were invariably made, or refused, entirely with reference to the responsibility of the persons applying, and the situation of the Bank at the time, and without any reference whatever to the political opinions of the applicants." u The Mr. Taylor says imputation is utterly -without foundation" He had been a punctual attendant at the board for nearly three years. There had been "no occurrence furnishing i\\e slightest foundation for such charge" These : extracts may suffice. They could be multiplied. The calumny was confronted and exposed by members of the Jackson party, who were too honest to permit a slander so foul to go unrebuked and unpunished. The man who acted the Woodbury of the West in this plot, is named David Thomas. I think proper not to shroud the glory of such a calumniating agency, nor deprive those who seek to revel in its magnificence of any of the benefits it may confer on them. it A was made on the Louisiana Branch. The it was put in circulation, He to in Philadelphia. repaired Washington, and met the foul imputators face to face. Win. B. Lewis can bear testimony, if he will, to the flat denial of their truth, and to the like onset Cashier happened to be, at the time frank and full offers made by the Cashier to disclose the entire transactions of the Bank, to any agent that might be sent, and to undergo any examination that it might be thought proper to order. And so can General Jackson himself. The this functionary to be embodied, charges were requested of nothing of the sort was the and was granted. calumniating Wooddropt, of lies the whoever he secreted, perhaps in was, bury South, the specifications to be made, but no The affair executive confidence, without the honour of a public exposure; or perhaps he may, like Woodbury, be basking in the 17 rays of Presidential favour, as a "reward" for his good intentions to fasten a calumny on the Branch Bank at New Orleans. I will conclude this No. by a few remarks on the issue of the trial between truth and falsehood, in the Mr. Woodbury case. of the Bank, repaired to Portsmouth. Immediately on their arrival, a note was addressed to each of the persons who signed Isaac Biddle, accompanied by one of the officers Hill's paper, implicating Mr. Mason and the Bank, in which the object of the visit was stated, accompanied by a request that the charges, &c. might be made, with a view to their examination, &.c. There were two petitions addressed to the United States Bank. To convey the idea that they were not the work of one mind, one was addressed "to the Directors of the Bank of the United States," dent and Directors of the Bank and the other "to the Presi- of the United States, at Phi- " The first dealt in implications of "the course pursued" by the Bank, and remonstrated against the reappointmentof Mr. Mason, and asked that the concerns of the Branch ladelphia. in future placed under the immediate control of well acquainted with the business and character of the trading community, and well disposed to manage the af- might be officers Branch with impartiality, &c. &c. &.c. the Branch with similar defections from a right course of action, and making a sweeping hit at "the head of the board" passed off into a most generous recommendation of suitable persons, out of whom to form the direction, &c. The first list was signed by fifty-eight names, and the last fairs of the The other charged To each of these co-operators of the fifty-seven names. Woodbury plot, Mr. Biddle addressed a note, as I have stated. Now, if these men were honest, and knew what they stated to be true, and were really in earnest to relieve the commuby nity of Portsmouth, from the evils charged, as proceeding from the mal-administration of the Bank, is it not reasonable to suppose they would, when thus invited, and when the opportunity was thus given them to substantiate their charges, come forward, and make them? not personal honour Nay, was demand 3 it? it not their duty, and did Well, reader, not one of them responded, or under any forms came forward to make the charges for examination, which they had been so free to subscribe to on the papers mentioned, in obedience to bury's schemes, and Isaac Hill's request. Wood- But if these men, one and all, should thus indirectly commit themselves of calumniating the Branch and its President, it were hardly to be supposed that a Senator of the United and an Ex-Governor, would flinch from so high an obligation, and skulk in shameful and degraded cowardice from the duty he had imposed on himself. But he did so yes reader, even Woodbury, who had essayed to move the powers at Washington, and did move them by enlisting them in a crusade against the President of the Bank at Portsmouth, and to bring down upon him the strong arm of the Mother Bank States, Philadelphia, skulked from the proffered opportunity of making good his charges, and now stands out before the eyes in world as a blighted and blasted recreant, to warn in future times the unprincipled and reckless, who would, like him, to serve his party, and aggrandize himself, stab an ho- of the nourable citizen to the heart, and turn the tide of a monied benefit, which like the waters of the Nile, contribute to make every thing fruitful, into himself and poisoned waters, refreshing, only to ARISTIDES. his friends. ' No. 5. I have developed the plot of the dominant party, on which relied to possess itself of the Bank of the United States. It was, as has been shown, by the agency of such instruments it Woodbury and Hill, to prize out the officers of the Bank, then charged with its management, and fill their places with the creatures of " the party? The power and influence of as the administration were relied upon, together with a secret fawning and professions in favour of the Bank, conveyed to its President, to procure that to be done in regard to turning out the officers of the Bank, which has been carried so extensively into practice with the officers- of the Government. That no 19 time might be lost, or chance given to the Bank to make other appointments, " suitable" names were handed in for its adoption by "the party." It needs no illustration to convince the most illiterate of the fatal issue of a yielding, on the part of the Bank, to such a course. Nothing put a stop to similar movements upon all the branches, (for a Woodbury could have been found ready to blow the same foul breath upon each of them,) but the answer of the President of the mother Bank, to the accusations against Mr. Mason. That answer was not expected. It was to the hopes of the party what the blight and the mildew are to the harvest it was entirely out ; of the line of action of " the Government," in all that related to those within its power. It was only necessary with it for some party tool, or some office-seeker, to whisper a charge against an innocent and unsuspecting incumbent in an office of the Government, when out he went, no matter how serviceable he was, or what his experience, or how ruinous it should prove to himself and family; and if he dared to inquire into the cause, or lift up a voice. of complaint, the press, having been subsidized for the purpose, was ready to blacken him all over, and hold him up as worthy, not only of just such treatment, but of the hate and execration of society, whilst it lauded every new appointment, and cursed it in turn, as it was found necessary to make the change, in carrying out the views of " the party." " Ever and anon," as one after another of those victims to party violence, was thrust from " the work goes bravely on /" press shouted, office, the Scarcely a doubt was entertained by the Woodburys and when senators and comptrollers should Hills of the party, that make charges, and ask for the removal from office of the Banks, especially when backed by the Secre- officers of the tary of the Treasury, under, of course, the sanction of the President of the United States, the request for the removal would, (as was the practice with " the Government"} be forthwith complied with, and an order issued for the expulsion But the United States Bank did not chime The President and Directors acted not the of this new and reckless party, but on the upon principles of the accused. in with this practice. 20 " This communication, (Woodsays Mr. Biddle in principle of eternal justice. bury's confidential letter to answer Mr. Ingham,) Mr. Ingham, " has been submitted to the board of not fail to examine the allegations of' Mr. Woodbury, and should they appear to be well founded, to This was worm-wood! apply an appropriate corrective." to directors, It was who ivitl precisely, what Woodbury would not wish, it was moreover what he did not expect, and doubtless when he heard that his secret influence, conveyed " confidentially" to the Secretary of the Treasury, had not resulted in an immediate dismissal of Mr. Mason, but that be done that he justice was to the misgivings of that period when he, and his coadjutors should be summoned to appear, and give in, and substantiate their charges, and trembled, caitiff-like, in view of the disgrace in which his calumnies officer, felt all would involve him and mourned ; his deep-laid scheme. in spirit over a failure of In the conclusion of the same letter, Mr. Biddle says, "I shall be happy to hear from you, whenever you obtain the communications from Kentucky and Louisiana, which shall receive immediate attention." Not a whisper from those quarters was heard against those This examining process, this fixed purpose to give the accused a hearing, silenced the political blood hounds, who were held in readinesss to seize and devour those whom Banks. their keepers knew to be as innocent as they were unsuspect- ing. The plot to get possession of the Bank by the same process that obtained "the party" such uncontrolled use of the offices of the government, was exploded by that single letter of Mr. Biddle's, which indicated that whatever might be the practice of "-the government" in killing off the federal officers, their places with mercenaries, and tools, that those who assisted in administering the affairs of the Bank, should, at to fill least, \\a.vejustice done them. The reader will bear in mind, that although the same movement that was made on the New Hampshire Branch, was, as Mr. Ingham's letter of llth July, 1829, discloses, to be made upon "other branches," particularly those in Kentucky also 21 and Louisiana, yet it was not made until 1832 and then, it was made, not in aid of the plan to get possession of the as at first designed, by a change of officers; but in aid of the elections! The same foul calumny was employed, it Bank, another object. have now arrived at that point in the history of this shocking business, in which a new movement upon the Bank was to be made. The first was, as I have shown, to get is true, but for I but the Bank not being willing to possession of the Bank unite with f( the government" in its plan of proscription, and all hope party," failing to from that quarter, was resolved by " the it DGP DESTROY THE BANK ! ! ! and profligate 1 ask I this to resolved question only in the destroy party relation which the now doomed institution stood, at that very time, to the government of the country not in the And what was relation in it, 1 which class of society. it ask, that this infuriated stood to merchants, traders, and every useless incumask? it, I A What was A fungus on the body of the government ? Was Did it oppose, it a restless, distracting, and wicked agent ? or co-operate in all the great measures which lawfully con- brance ? nected it Let Mr. Ingham, then Se- with the government? cretary of the Treasury, and the fiscal organ of the govern" the ment, and a member of party" and a disciple of the school of the proscribers, answer. connexion between the extracts I am To keep up going to give a proper from Mr.. Ingham's correspondence with the Bank, I will take a paragraph from the letter of Mr. Biddle to him, in which Mr. Biddle vindicates the character of the Bank, and shows not how entirely aloof it kept how sincerely desirous it was only itself but to of the administration, and further its from party politics, promote the just policy views in whatever related connexion which existed between the government on the one hand, and the Bank on the other. Mr. Biddle says to to the Mr. Ingham, in his letter of Sept. 15, 1829: "The earliest operation of the treasury, since you were charged with it, in which the Bank had any share, was the reimbursement of the public debt on the 1st July last. This was your first essay 22 department, the first important measure of the new administration; and if it had occasioned any inconvenience, or any pressure, these would certainly have been made the in the pretext of great reproach against yourself, and your political associates and undoubtedly much inconvenience and much ; pressure would have been felt, if- the Bank had not laboured to avert them with a promptness, a cordiality, and an efficacy, rare even in its own active history. Before determining on the measure, you did the board the honour to consult them, and certainly if they had listened to considerations merely pecuniary, they would have discouraged it ; if they had desired to shun the responsibility of an operation, of which the result might be doubtful, they would have been silent; and, if it had been possible for them to feel any reluctance to aid the new administration, it would have been sufficient merely, and irreproachably, to have done their duty. But regarding only what they considered the enlarged interest of the country, and too conscious of their own independence to fear that their zeal in the public service should be mistaken for a devotion to the public servants, they at once assumed all responsibility, within their proper sphere, of encouraging the operation, and, from the commencement to the termination, watched and guarded its progress with an unwearied attention, which the most zealous friend of the administration could not have surpassed." Was any of this denied ? Hear Mr. Ingham, in his am fully sensible of the dispoletter of the 6th June: sition of the Bank to afford all practicable facility to the fiscal "I contained in your operations of the government, and the offers On the 19th letters, with that view, are duly appreciated." June he again writes " I cannot conclude this : communica- without expressing the satisfaction of the department at the arrangements which the Bank has made for effecting these tion payments so little in a manner so accommodating to the treasury, and the community." Again, on the 1 1th embarrassing "I take the occasion to express the great satisfaction to July of the Treasury Department, at the manner in which the President and Directors of the Parent Bank have discharged : 23 their trusts inall their immediate relations to the government, &c., and especially in the facilities afforded in transferring the funds of the government, and in the preparation for the heavy payment of the public debt on the 1st instant, -which has-been board effected by means of the prudent arrangements of your at a time of severe depression on all the productive employments of the country, -without causing any sensible addition to the pressure, or even visible effect upon the ordinary operations of the State Banks.' 1 '' This, reader, was the fiscal agent, the efficient, effective, and valuable agent, which was marked as the prey of "the party," and which that party had now resolved, at all hazards, to destroy The ! however, had not yet become general. True, the refusal to expel Mr. Mason, and to give up the Portsmouth Branch to the management of the Woodburys and Hills of stir, that quarter, and thus open the way for like changes elsewhere, had acted upon their feelings like the arrow that The bleeding caterers for their royal the sting, and run back into his presence, but the royal beast was not yet himself hit. He heard their cries, but had yet to learn the quarter whence the arrow wounds the Jackall. master had felt came, and A to know the hand that sent it. period soon after arrived, however, in to trespass when upon a domain not the royal beast, own, received his attempting a shaft himself, and then, and not till then, the forests resounded with his roar, and all the lesser, congenial, and sympathising animals, set up a cry ! This particular event, with some of shall form the subject of my next. its subsequent results, ARISTIDES. No. The forest, 1 beast, in have was not made to roar until the royal trespass on a domain not his own, was said, attempting to G. 24 himself hit. I drop the The figure. sequel will furnish the illustration. Out of the move upon the New Hampshire Branch, and Mr. Ingham, arose Woodbury's a correspondence between the latter, as Secretary of the Treasury, and Mr. Biddle, as President of the Bank, of unusual interest. It were worth while, did the limits which from. "confidential" letter to are forced upon these essays, by newspaper rules, permit to give this correspondence entire. But there is not room. The defeat of Woodbury, as has been shown, and the it, dis- became involved in their grace from the had themselves made, and skulking charges they under to forms, declining, any appear against the accused, was too signal, and too humiliating, to be allowed to pass without an effort by the party to screen them from the odium in which he and that awaited them. his coadjutors The vernment" determined charges they had made, "the go- and by thus dividing the from bearing it all. The swell that had been made to roll over the New Hamp- odium, relieve its to respond to, faithful servants and that was intended to engulph Mr. Mason, back upon Washington, and gurgled and foamed, and agitated those who were watching from that common centre shire Branch, now fell its final effects upon those whom it had been commissioned to This gave impulse to the fiscal organ of the party, and hence the continued correspondence referred to between destroy. Mr. Ingham and Mr. Biddle, or the Treasury and the Bank. It was Mr. Ingham's drift to ply, and he did it very adroitly, implications, against the Bank, on the grounds of its political This was the flimsy covering which it was partialities. thought proper to throw over the shoulders of Woodbury and Mr. Biddle met, and denied the existence of his coadjutors. any such the administration partialities in all that related to In his letter to Mr. Ingham, of of the affairs of the Bank. July 18, 1829, he says "The infusion of the spirit of party into every thing around us, causes a constant effort to draw the institution within the sphere of what we called politics. {jWlTH THESE THE BANK DISCLAIMS ALL CONNEXION." the time, when, if "the party" had proof Here was to the 25 it should have produced it. That it had not a parhas been demonstrated in its refusal to appear when invited, to make good its charges against Mr. Mason, and the contrary, ticle, New Hampshire, and Kentucky, and Louisiana Branches. Biddle overlooked that little streamlet that mean- Had Mr. dered through Mr. Ingham's correspondence, and which it was designed to increase, and widen, and deepen, until it should "boil, and foam, and thunder through," and whelm, and over- whelm all before it, the struggle might not have begun when between "the Government" upon the one hand, in its attempt to crush the Bank; and the Bank on the other, in its efforts to save itself, and preserve the country from the fatal consequences of its overthrow. And what was that little it did, streamlet? A disclosed purpose, I answer, on the part of party" to exercise over the affairs of the Bank a control which neither the charter, nor any laiv gave it the right to exercise; and with the sole view of driving the Bank One power assumed into a compliance with its mandates. about this time, was to take from the Bank its agency in the Pension Department And Mr. Eaton, then Secretary of 11 the War, always ready to comply with the orders of "the party," and with his characteristic inefficiency, did actually order a transfer of the Pension Agency from the Branch Bank at Portsmouth, to a small Bank at Concord, of which before Isaac Hill to Washington to act as Comptroller, he was PreThis was a movement, as has been since decided, and went sident! as all intelligent It men knew was got up by Isaac at the time, in violation of law! Hill himself, in a memorial which was circulated among, and signed by "divers of his political partisans, and (^J others especially interested in the matter." This was the to play; sort of game that these bold adventurers had overawe 'the and thus was it to attempted begun Bank, and drive it from the position in which the laws had placed it, when Mr. Biddle, in connexion with the above extract from his letter of June 18th, says: "Belonging to the nation, and feeling that its prosperity and its usefulness are destroyed, the moment it loses its independence; the Bank owes 26 NO party, and allegiance TO (p WILL SUBMIT TO NONE." This bold and honourable independence that ought to have inspired even such a party with respect for the Bank, produc- ed a directly contrary effect, and henceforth the resolve to And why destroy it? Not because it had not been faithful and zealous, as I have shown it was, in co-oper- "destroy it !" ating with, and aiding the new administration, but because the bank refused to throw itself into the arms of the party to be used by it for party and political purposes. Because it chose to exercise its powers within the circle prescribed by its own legitimate sphere. contrast with the officers of the strong These had all yielded up their just ac- the laws, and to confine It presented itself in federal government. its action to and losing sight of the object of their origin, had fallen to victims the withering blight of that baleful influence which tion, Jacksonism had now infused into them all. This bright, steady from the bank, could not be looked upon by men who preferred and acted in such darkness. The great plan had been devised the purpose was fixed the decree had gone forth, that the "party" would possess ALL, (as for example it light has the post office department,) or if any should dare to think or act for themselves, whether corporations or individuals, the decree had now gone tire history of the moment Mr. forth that they should perish. party is fruitful in proofs of this. Biddle, in the name The From en- the of the bank, declared that "would not submit," from that moment the whole country, through the officers and expectants of the new administration, and the press, was put in motion, and the welkin was made it to ring with the shouts of "the party," urging it upon all true jriends, to aid in producing the downfal of the bank. "The Bank orves allegiance to no party, and -will submit to none" was predating like, to the party, what the barbed arrow lion; it set it in when unopposed, How comparatively is one general " roar." the monarch of the gentle, unchafed, upon lands filled when he with is spoils. is to the de- How Lybian lambdesert. permitted to trespass, How little he regards 27 the limits that bound his domain, beyond. So with this new party if he perceive inducements this Jacksonism, that had now gone forth, regardless of the limits which law and justice had set to its movements. To be checked with " the bank owes allegiance to no party, and will submit to none" and at the moment too when every other province in its dominion had yielded, (save two*) was not to be borne. Hence the war cry "down with the bank!"" And this annunciation ("will submit himself. to none") crossed the path of President Jackson This was the shaft in the side of the royal animal. He had been taught that he was "monarch of all he surveyed'* and that none would dare to "dispute his right." He believed and acted on the principle. No wonder the effect should be what it was! Up to this moment the bank had the power of making itself as great a favourite with the party, as it was now detested by it. It had only to yield and turn out any officer, who might be marked by the party, as not suited to the purposes of the party; to surrender the pension and other treasures that the laws and individuals, had put in its keeping, and in all things to acquiesce in the dictates of the party, to have been the most constitutional, the most useful aye, indispensable establishment in the Union. Mr. Biddle would have been lifted, press, as high as any of Gen. Jackson's favourites, and shouted to as one of the most wonderful men of this or any by the other age. But, alas, for him, standing as his position required he should, in the front rank of this warfare, and being and defending it ably and nobly, he was the destined to receive discharges from the opposing ranks, of no matter what material composed, and to be in very spite, faithful to his trust, impotent malice, dubbed "Nick Biddle" my next commence the calumnies which the party, from this moment determined to invent, and send among the people, by the agency of its presses, with a view to dis- and in I shall in affect stroy them towards the bank, and thus undermine and deIf, before I have done with these men, and their it. * The Senate and Supreme Court. 28 acts, the honest of every party, will not feel disgust at their conduct even to loathing, I mistake the quality of public virtue, and have overrated the power and influence of truth. ARISTIDES. No.. 7. I set beg the reader's attention to a short review of the right up by "the party" to exercise an agency over the affairs of the Bank, other than that which is* provided for by law. what I have denominated "the little streamlet" that the Bank detected running through Mr. Ingham's correspon- This is dence. "After," says Mr. Biddle in his reply to Mr. Ingham and we hope "a very of a very deliberate, Sept. 15th, 1829 dispassionate consideration, &c. &c. the Board of Directors think it evident that the Secretary of the Treasury believes 1st. That "the relations between the Government and the Bank" confer some supervision of the choice' of the officers of the Bank to the "proper management" of which his interpo- sition is authorize^!. 2d. That there is some "action of the Government on the Bank" not precisely explained, but in which he is the proper and agent That finally, his right and duty to suggest the views of the administration as to the [XJ^'OUTICAL OPINIONS and CON- 3d. DUCT oithe Now it is officers of the Bankf* this is precisely the sort of supervision the administra- had determined on exercising over every other office or institution within its reach, and it thus sought, by the same tion levelling process^ to bring the Bank also at its feet. The assumed were promptly and spiritedly, though respect"The Board of Directors of theBank fully met, and denied. of the United States, and the Board of Directors of the rights Branches of the Bank of the United States, says Mr. Biddle, acknowledge not the slightest responsibility" to the Secretary of the Treasury, touching the political opinions of their offi- 29 cers, that being a subject never desire to know on which they never consult, and the views of any administration." Nothing but the limits prescribed to these essays keeps me from giving, entire, the masterly exposition of the views of the Bank on those three levelling and corrupting assumptions of the Secretary. [The reader is referred to the appendix of Reports of the Committee of Inquiry, appointed March 14, 1832, by the House of Representatives pages 139 to 147, inclusive.] I have recurred to this subject merely for the sake of demonstrating that the "new administration" didset up a claim of rig hi to meddle with, and control the Bank, for political ends, precisely as it had resolved on doing, and has done, with all the departments and offices of the federal government. I consider the settlement of this point essential to a right com- prehension, 1st. Of the plot, and 2d. Of the cause for excitement in which the party and head were thrown, when the Bank resisted. I now proceed. " 7 his world was made for Caesar," would seem its J to have been one of the early lessons of President J^pkson. Flattered as he was by the sycophants around him; hearing from their lips, what afterwards broke out in public, was " The second Washington" (i the Rock of then, in private, that he Ages" "the greatest and the best" and DC/3 that "his po- pularity would stand any thing" it was natural for him, with his early impressions, derived from the motto "This world was made for Csesar," to infer, that "the government" was made and that whatever power he might choose whether lawful or unlawful, to perpetuate his government, he had the right to employ. That he has acted on this principle, whether he reached the conclusion through for hint} to exercise, the channel I have suggested, or by any other, no well in- formed citizen, if he be honest, will deny. Irritate, or cross the path of such a man, and what limits will bound his re(i venge? Besides the annunciation that the Bank owes alto no will submit and legiance to"none, which as I party, have, said, was the shaft in the side of the Lion, there were 30 divers smaller arrows that stung no less keenly. One of them the entire of ''the especially passed through phalanx party" wounding in its lodging at last, passage the whole array of proscribers, and in the President himself! It is preserved, as a that same relic, in This letter of Mr. Biddle's of the 15th June. is it: "The Bank strong enough to exercise the noblest prerogative is afraidof being just to its officers,- and content that they perform their duty, it will not y^/" PURSUE THEM INTO PRIVATE LIFE WITH INQUISITIONS INTO THEIR FRIENDSHIPS, NOR WILL IT EVER SACRIFICE THEM, of strength, not to be EITHER TO APPEASF. ANT CLAMOR, OR PROPITIATE ANT AUTHORITY!" This was a scortcher! went very heart of the foul and in connexion with administration, to have driven from the discharge, ought It to the new practice of the what preceded its of proscription which was at that moment pursuing unsuspecting and innocent men, "with inquisitions into their friendships," and sacrificing them, Molochlike, to appease (party) clamour, and 'propitiate' party au- party that thority, fell spirit and promote party ends. who knows there any one Is son its impatience at restraint the spirit of Andrew Jackits violence when resisted and the desperate issue which he has always made with even a fancied antagonist, who does not see in all this the elements of those vindictive and lawless acts with which he has pursued the Bank, with a view, in his own words, to "crush the any body at a loss now to know the cause of But that vengeance, to be effectual, must his vengeance? not break forth prematurely. There lives hot a man who knows General Jackson, who does not know that he hides the incipient fires of the most consuming vengeance with a covering monster?"" Is he carry the pistol, or the dagger, they are carefully concealed under a robe, and never drawn, but when a vantage ground justifies him in concluding that the stroke, or the shot, or, if when made, this by will facts. be were easy to illustrate and prove first move against the Bank did not fatal. It Hence his was the flame of his revenge permitted then to burst forth. It was covert Before 1 state what it was, I will prove, from under his oivn hand, that he had not sparkle, nor hiss, nor been, before the events which I have stated, the enemy of the 31 Bank nay, prove that he considered I will it a valuable in- worthy of his patronage, and meriting to be extended for the benefit of the people. The following is his own let- stitution, when ter addressed to Mr. Cheves in 1821, that gentleman was President of this same Bank. He seems to have thought, when he wrote it, that the mother Bank in Philadelphia was a "Branch!" PENSACOLA, Aug, 15, 1821. At the request of the citizens of this place, I have taken the liberty of enclosing you a memorial addressed to the President and Directors of the Branch of the United States Bank at Philadelphia, which has been "Sir generally signed by the respectable inhabitants of this city. "The advantages to be derived from the establishment of a Branch of Bank in Pensacola have been ably set forthin the memoand I have no doubt that a branch here, under a judicious direction, rial, would not only prove convenient to the inhabitants in this section of the the United States country, but also beneficial to that institution. 'I have the honour, &c. ANDREW JACKSON." Langdon Cheves, Esq. * I shall be excused for introducing here a letter from General Jackson's Mr. Biddle, asking to have extended, for the benefit of the citizens of Albany, a branch of this same bank. The remark that Mr. Noah makes on this letter of Mr. Van Buren, chosen successor, written five years after to "Had the Branch been is, established at Albany, at^hat time and under the signers,) control (these signers are, among others, Wm. L. Marcy, M. Van Buren, B. F. Butler, Charles E. Dudley, and Nathan Sanford,) 03* the Safety Fund would have been unknown, and the United their (i. e. States Bank re-chartered." What a figure this letter makes Van Buren "UNCOMPROMISING HOSTILITY TO THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES," flying out of his mouth. It was/gs then, but cut, with his thistles now very wholesome bread indeed in 1826, but a serpent, now!!! ALBANY, July Dear 17, 1826. At the instance of a highly respectable portion of the good people of this city, I have signed, and now transfoit, the enclosed. Per' sonally 1 neither have nor desire any connexion with Banks!.'!! and the sole Sir object of my agency is to gratify the wishes of our citizens, and to promote the interests of the city. Of know the fitness of the proposed measure it would be idle for me, who nothing, to speak to you, who know every thing, upon the subject. I will, therefore, only say that the applicants are men of the first character in point of business and credit, of unexampled prosperity. 1 and that the present shall be happy to state of the city is that hear from you as soon as convenient.'.' M. N. BIDDLE, Esq. VAN BUREN. 32 No hostility towards the Bank is discovered in any of General Jackson's acts, or sayings afterwards, until in 1829, it refused, as has been shown, to become tributary to the political schemes of "his administration." The first act of General Jackson, which, however, conceals his wrath which was kept then from bursting forth, only by the agency of those around we "The him, find in his messagfe to Congress, of December, 1829: Bank of charter of the the United States, says that message, expires in 1836, and its stockholders will, most proIn order to bably, apply for a renewal of their privileges. avoid the evils resulting from precipitancy, in a measure involving such important principles, and such deep pecuniary interests, I feel, that I ed, too soon present cannot it in justice to the party interest- to the deliberate consideration of the Legislature and the people. Both the constitutionality and the expediency of the law, creating this Bank, are well questioned by a large portion of our fellow citizens, and it must 3 HAS FAILED in the great end of a and sound establishing uniform currency" There is only one charge reade in this against the Bank, and that relates to its agency in effecting "a uniform and sound currency." As to the reference io the "constitutionality and expediency of the law creating the Bank," the President be admitted by all that it DC/ assumes -nothing, except to say they "are well questioned by a large portion of our fellow citizens." business is He does not say that he questions them. with the unqualified assertion touching the currency. This It is even more is an executive calumny against the Bank. barefaced than were the calumnies of Woodbury and Hill, My and others. It was made in the face of the whole nation and the world, and of facts no less notorious than are the revolutions of the seasons, or the shining of the sun by day, and the It were almost as great an outrage stars by night. the people, had the President the common of sense upon said the Bank had not faithfully and effectually fulfilled its moon and obligations to .the government, or that it had issued no bills, made no discounts, or that there was no Bank in existence. The flame which Woodbury and Hill, and the under cabi- 33 had kindled in the President against the Bank, must, howAt first it was not intended to be of ever, have some outlet. much moment, but passing oflfat some remote quarter, it would, net, after answering that end, by easing somewhat the President, an earnest to those who had him in charge, as to what furnish* they might count 'upon for the future. I shall demonstrate in my next, the absolute ignorance of the state of the currency, which such a calumny disclosed; expose its wickedness, and then pass off to others emanating from the same high source; treating each with as much respect as its nature and object will permit, but with that inde- pendence which truth demands, and which, as a have the right to exercise. citizen, I ARISTIDES. No. 8. all the assurance of the worst men, and all the and corruption upon which that assurance operated, ignorance to force out through a Presidential message to Congress, an assertion so utterly devoid of truth, as that "the Bank had I hazard failed to establish a uniform and sound currency." It required nothing in saying that those it to be put forth only as who contrived this calumny, caused a. feeler, or a decoy duck, to ascer- tain the sta'te of the public mind, and how far the President might go in the desperate effort which it was now resolved to make, to be revenged of the Bank for the firm and honourhad taken, and its refusal to lend itself as a party able stand it tool to the new administration. The assertion was not intend- ed to operate upon the enlightened and virtuous, but only upon the ignorant and vicious. To give it effect, those whom the President had "rewarded," as also all who were promised to be rewarded, together with the press that had been subsidised for the purpose, were all required to echo whatever the President might say, and back him in the attitude which he now assumed, of personal hostility to the Bank. The plan of operations was agreed upon the advances upon the Bank, 34 with the mode of attack, were all settled. The leader of the a personage than the "hero of two wars" "the second Washington," and the head of "the party conflict was no less ? who, in the victory that was promised over the Bank, was to be crowned with a new chaplet, and those who should aid him in the enterprise, with " re-wards" But the Bank was at that time deeply seated in the affections of the great body of the people. Pennsylvania was unanimous for a re-charter, and proved this, by passing in her The people every Legislature corresponding resolutions. where enjoying the benefits of thejifty millions which were and no portion of the country feeling any distress, but, on the contrary, every portion of it improving and flourishing, it was necessary in taking a first step of hostility to do it with great caution. A breath was to be blown upon in circulation, the almost extinguished embers of "constitutional" objections, to be revived touching the "expediency" of aud doubts were the Bank. But it was necessary, at that time, not to commit the President upon either of these points. He had a second term of office to cater for, and those who basked in the sun- who announced his in- tention to serve but one term,) were solicitous to remain they were, during, at least, two Presidential terms. where Hence shine of his favour, (except Kendall, the extreme caution necessary to be observed in touching those points of "constitutionality" and "expediency" and the absolute necessity of avoiding any committal in regard to them by him who was, henceforth, to be the leader in this war. There was nothing bold and daring calumny. left, at that time, but to issue a yet, upon which it was deemed safe a direct charge against the Bank, or the personal honour of those who administered its affairs. The "spies" had not yet got to work, nor a party committee appointed. It had been certified by the Secretary of the Treasury (one of the There was no ground to rest party) that it had ably and efficiently fulfilled all its obligations to the Government, and the people every where felt its agency, as the earth feels the influence of the vernal year. But something must be said the Bank must be struck and 35 man who must say the President was the any thing,") (for *'his popularity could stand the word, and give the blow. The ; attempt was certainly hazardous especially as Woodbury and Hill, and others, the scouts, had been driven back in disthe voice of Jackson grace. But the onset must be made must be heard his finger must point the way and he must be seen now in the van. Then let him, who dare, of all in or office, and of all who expected to participate in the spoils ; any press, having flying over let a moment, if At such a it the Jackson flag, falter for they dare, they knew better. of doubt and desperation, and in such an crisis emergency, "revenge! revenge!" was sounded when up went the Presidential Banner, with the foul and calumniating inscription : " It must (C^ end of be admitted, establishing a BY AH, UNIFORM that the and Bank has failed, in the great SAFE currency ."D At sight of it, every intelligent citizen, "who was honest, ashamed marvelled at the ignorance of the President and was startled at the wickedness of the declaration! All felt previous proofs to the contrary, were now to be utterly disregarded; and all subsequent evidence trodden, by the party, under What, foot. if the Secretary of the Treasury, had only about a year before, said : "That during the four years preceding, the receipts of the Government had amounted to more than ninety-seven millions of dollars, and that all the payments had been punctually met; that it is the preservation of a sound currency, that can alone impart stability to property, and urevent those fluctuations in its value, hurtful alike to individuals and the nation; and that (/ this It advantage THE BANK has secured to the community." was Now, as though such testimony had never been borne. either the President uttered a calumny against the Bank, in ignorance, or knowing it to be one; or the Secretary of the Treasury palmed upon Congress and the people, in an official There is no escaping one or the other report, a. falsehood! horn of this dilemma. Let us now see which of the parties is sustained. Congress, in 1829, had both the President's and Secretary's declaration before it and indeed whatever else bore on the ; question. The Committee of Ways and Means of the House 36 of Representatives, (Mr. M'Duffie, Chairman,) to whom was referred that part of the message relating to the Bank, "decidedly dissented" from the President's assertion, that the Bank had failed to establish a uniform and sound currency. on the contrary, and in this respect, "been productive had, of results, more salutary, than were anticipated by the most It sanguine advocates of the policy establishing it. {J IT HAS ACTUALLY FURNISHED A CIRCULATING MEDIUM MORE UNIFORM THAN &C. Committee of the Senate, also, upon the same subject, in 1829, says "The Government had, for ten years preceding SPECIE," A : the 1st of January, 1830, received from 9,000 agents, $230,068,855 17. This sum has been collected in every section of widely extended country. It has been disbursed at other it points, many thousand miles distant from the places where this was collected, and buted without the yet, it has been so collected, and distrias the Committee could learn,) loss (so far of a single dollar, and -without the expense of a single dollar to the Government" The committee of the Senate proceed " That the currency by which the government has been enabled to collect and transfer such an amount of revenue, to pay its army and navy, and all its expenses, and the national debt, is UNSAFE, or UNSOUND, cannot readily be believed." Now let the reader, adding to all this his own experience, and comparing the condition of the currency before the Bank of the Unifed States was organized, with the state of the currency when General Jackson said it was neither "uniform nor and decide what reliance ought afterwards to be placed on any thing which that high functionary might assert touchand especially when it was ing the anairs of the Bank, safe," that vengeance was sought of it, for refusing to become the creature of "the party." does the reader believe Andrew Jackson, upon his naked assertion, or the Secretary of the Treasury, backed as known Who he is own by a committee of each house of Congress, and by his For where is the man who does personal experience? not know, that he could have travelled, at that very time, 37 whole country, and found in Bank Notes, of the its Branches, a medium as uniform as the light and a safety as unquestioned as the consciousness over this United States Bank, and ; own existence. The -wickedness of the President's assertion need exposed. The dimmest eye will perceive it in the of his not be injury which doubts, even touching the "soundness" of the currency, were calculated to inflict on the government itself, by lessening the value of the seven millions it owned of the bank stock, and that owned by every individual stockholder. Such a foul breath, blown over the reputation of the Bank, was calculated to produce (coming from a President of the United States) effects not less fatal than the incendiary seeks to produce Whether it be for fires and lays waste property. his not the character of or to glut revenge, changes plunder, the act. There is no law of morals that exempts the former when he from the weight of public indignation, to the benefits of which the latter is not equally entitled. In my eye they occupy the same level, and are entitled to like punishment. It was not any agency of the President, nor to any motive in fall in bank stock did not occur, of deep and lastto those who owned but to unshaken the it, ing injury public confidence in the Bank, and in the wisdom and discretion of those to -whom its interests were confided. owing to him, that a I will show, in my operated, and what next, how results it this first Presidential ' No. The President had struck his were required I did to follow not notice in ARISTIDES. 9. first blow, and his retainers up. my last, one part of the Presidential plan of attack on the bank. in these essays, is it calumny produced. I omitted it, because my business with the calumnies, and their authors. But the appeal which it made to the speculators and plunderers, was so direct, and so intimately connected with the pro- 38 fligacy of the plot, that I beg leave to mention it here. formed part of the same Presidential message of 1829. It It was a proposition for another Bank, in place of the present, to be founded on the resources of the Government. The design to make it easier for men, who were willing to go with the President, but who, like ^Pennsylvania, at that time, was not prepared to keep him company in his crusade against the was currency of the country, and the war that was commenced against the prosperity of the nation, to fall in with, and cooperate with him. "Oh, well, it was argued, it's no matter the Bank ofc the United States shall go down, it's only overthrowing a monopoly, and a power that is made potent, if and hurtful by foreign capital, and put in its place a genuine American Bank founded on the resources of the government; in a word, an institution that will consent to go with our party" The bait sure enough took, even to the silly prejudice against foreign capital, which has just the same reason in it, as would be a hatred of the sun's light, because it comes from the solar, and not the mundane system. Even Pennsylvania began, under this calumny, and this silly delusion which was born with it, to relax her hold on the Bank, and to place herself in an attitude of rebellion to her own best interests. Tidings of alt these workings and heavings, in the minds of men, were transmitted like so many rays of light through the appropriate organ, the under cabinet at Washington, to the President, who was told that nothing could exceed the greet3 " the ings with which his plan had been received by QC/ people." Well then, at the next session of Congress, in 1830, the President in his message, having become delighted with the which he was assured, there never was any thing to equal it, and in the face of the rebuke which Congress had uttered at the previous session, repeated his views; and so success, of by the same means,) in 1831. Meanwhile the executive machinery, under the direction of the under cabinet, had been so extended, and the press had become so again, (encouraged and the office holders were so thoroughly with the nature of the service that was required of impressed effectually drilled, 39 them, as not to dare, even to think, much less speak, except were commanded, that no two voices could be heard as they extreme south; no inharmonious tone from from Maine, to the the Hills of New Hampshire, but all to the Bentons of Louisiana, united in harmonious concert, to sustain the "venerable President" in his "enlightened, and patriotic design" upon the Bank! The new Bank was able of all designs yet held out as one of the most invalustamped, in its very features, with the impress of Presidential wisdom, and dandled on the lap of his own personal favour, it must be of all things in the world, in the eye of " the party," the very best adapted to promote not the interests of the people, but of "the party" Of course every party man was taught to believe that it was for htm it was intended, and that from its paps, he should draw, for the remainder of his life, the most nourishing benefits. Pennsylvania was half persuaded to apply her lips to this fountain, but one of her eyes not being, yet, quite closed to interests, she saw a design in her sister, New York, It became her aside, and take the -whole to herself. push and it -was done! a film that to over eye bring necessary " THE PARTY" has always been expert in blinding certain her own to people ; and certain states. This scheme of a national Bank, was so monstrous was so improbable, the and ridiculous, that every inthing in man and of out it, treated it with conCongress, telligent " not I that after need say, tempt. answering, like the gold recent the its bill" of more delusive end of creation, it origin, itself was permitted to sink into oblivion. But to the calumnies, and their authors. I have no intention of enumerating and exposing all the calumnies against the Bank, or naming all their authors. I had just as well attempt to count the stars. It will not be expected of me to enumerate the number of members of Congress, whom the Bank has been charged with bribing; nor those who, having been stabbed in party broils, it has been asserted, owed their wounds to the agency of this institution nor shall I number the dead, who have been sent to their 40 long home, by a ders, as its man agency. in battle I shall treat these, would the and like slan- bites of musquetoes, or the presence of toads ; or, as would the physician those agents of his art which are used to expel only the ordinary causes of when the stomach had lodged within it, deadly poison. True, those miserable contrivances, as venomous as they are disease, have not been without their use. "The party" have kept them buzzing and hopping in every body's path ; and many have yielded themselves up to the fatal influence of odious, They were generated for the grog shop genbe used at party meetings, to operate upon and influence minds incapable of relishing any thing more pure, their presence. try; and to comprehending any thing more thing more My intricate, or of digesting any substantial. business is with Presidential calumnies and with and with those of those of his Secretaries of the Treasury his " spies;" and such sort of people. It will be seen before 1 have done with these, that what those men have said and by the press, and their party Government was enough, not to destroy a Bank, but, when applied in the same spirit, the liberties of a -whole people. How far the use of the same done, aided, as they have been, army; and the patronage of the by a like spirit, may ultimately effect this a few years more will determine, perhaps, a few object, agencies, prompted months. have named "the spies" last but their employment was among- the earlier movements of the President. How long they worked in their disgraceful and secret employment, I have not the means of knowing. That they were employed 1 by President Jackson, I have his these also prove the nature of the "duty" to perform. to notice I will pass a witness procured H. Benton ; own letters to work that it prove was made and their over the spies for the present, for the occasion, by Col. Thomas and who came forward prepared, as the sequel damn the Bank to damn its President and will prove, to to blow a mildew over the reputation of the whole of the officers. It was fitting that he who could write such Bank's a letter as did Col. Thomas H. Benton, about the East room 41 of the President's House, should be found in fellowship, and urging on to this work of destruction of both the currency of the country, and the reputation of men, such a man as Reuben M. Whitney. I say this witness was sent on to ap- pear before the Examining Committee, by Col. Benton. Adams says, in his it Mr. unanswered, and unanswerable Report : That Mr. Whitney, upon being asked, be readj (Let " What had been his motive for ?" gave giving the testimony the answer, that " he did not recollect, whether it had been 1 voluntary, or asked of him ;" but on being further questioned, he answered, "that Judge Clayton (the Chairman of the Com- him by a letter from " birds DCr Mr. Benton. Here then we have these of a feather?' What sort of bird Col. Benton is, can be shown by mittee,) had been recommended to 3 certain North Carolina and other reminiscences, and by that particular reminiscence touching the East room letter, &c. &c. What sort of bird Reuben M. Whitney is, the reader will judge for himself, for I shall give him to him, just as I find him, in his character of witness, giving his testimony against the Bank, and in favour of the President's war upon it, his oath! I will further premise, that this is the [f* upon same Reuben M. Whitney, who has been ever since such a special favourite of the President, and "the party." Reuben M. Whitney, before the Committee. But to "Whispers, says Mr. Adams, it now appears had been in circulation even from the year 1824, ripening for a term of seven years, in rumours of combined and concerted frauds and embezzlement of the funds of the Bank to the {J private purposes of the President of the Bank and the principal Brokers of Philadelphia." "The charges against the President of the Bank were, that Thomas Biddle, a distant relative of and one of the most eminent Brokers of Philadelphia, had been in the habit, by permission of the President, of taking his, money out of the drawer, leaving in its place cerkeeping the money an indefinite number first teller's tificates of stock; of of days, and then replacing the certificates of stock, without money and taking back his interest upon of payment the monies of which he had had the use.' The quintessence 6 of the charge was, the use by Mr. Thomas Biddle, of the monies of the Bank without interest." (See Mr. Adams' Report for this, and for what follows.) To all this Reuben M. Whitney STvore! He swore also that he went to the President's room, and finding him alone, told him what he had discovered, &c., and requested that no such transaction should be repeated whilst he was a Director of the institution. He swore also that the President did not deny the facts as he stated them. He swore that the President coloured up very much, and promised that no such thing should happen again. Now this, was enough to kindle a fire sufficient, not only to dethat was favourable towards the Bank in public opibut to consume to ashes the fair fame of Mr. Diddle. nion, was worse than an attempt to murder It Well, was all, or if true, stroy all ! NOT A WORD OF IT, reader!!! (Mr. any of this true? Whitney made other charges, the nature of which will appear in their refutation.) Mr. Adams, in commenting on this act of shocking depravity, says "The instinct of calumny is inventive in details, (Mr. had and torn memorandum of a tattered produced Whitney much of this, and dealt in minute detail) precisely because make their way most easily to the credit of the hearer, has been long remarked by keen observers of human action, that he who accustoms himself to make a truant of his details and it memory, is often times the first to credit his own lie." Mr. Adams does not pretend to say this was the case with R. M. Whitney. But he does say, "that the charges respecting the notes (this relates to the other charges referred to) which he (Whitney) had discovered in the Teller's drawer, and which he swore had not been entered^ on the books when he discovered them, but which were so entered when he discovered them, and that 3 they were so entered by his direction, was QCr RETRACTED BY HIMSELF after the statement had been blasted by the production of the entries upon the face of the books themIt also turned out that Whitney's pretended interview with the President, Mr. Biddle, at the time he rebuked selves!" him, and when he received the confession, accompanied by a blushing promise of future amendment, that this identical Biddle was absent from Philadelphia!!.' When this fact Mr. was 43 proven, Mr. Adams says "Mr. Whitney was not prepared with any substituted invention of details to supply its place." I ask, of the leaders Which, of "the party;" which of its pensioned presses; which of its "rewarded" officers, and which of the expectants, ever sought to disabuse the public mind of this foul and damning calumny? Nay, I ask which of them, (except Judge Clayton, the Jackson chairman of the committee who revoked all his agency against the Bank in the horrible fraud committed by his report on the public confidence, by a speech confessional on the floor of Congress) omitted to send the testimony of Whitney, blasted as it was, round among No, the poison of the slanders was not only work upon its victims, but channels were cut to send "the people?" left to it over the land ! most daring attempt to slay men's reputation, and entail infamy on themselves and families, that President Jackson holds by the hand, to this hour, and with all these Is it for this same Reuben M. Whitney? If not, Let no man suppose I cherish a particle of personal hostility towards Mr. Whitney. I do not even know him, and so far as I know, never saw him. I am discussing his official acts, and demonstrating the foulness of the calumnies which have been invented to destroy one of the If they immolate him, he best institutions that ever existed. has nobody to blame but himself. I feel in common with all the humane, sympathy for his family and so did the public facts before for what him, else this is it? when by his defection he sought to on down ruin our country and its hopes. But the traitor bring was blasted for the family of Arnold, ! I shall in my next pay my respects to "the spies," and to their testimony. If any ask, as some have, why this re-opening the wounds of the past, and in defence of an institution that is destined to go down ? I answer by referring to quoting the couplet with which masterly report, " When The my first number, and by Mr. Adams concluded his truth, or virtue, an affront endures, affront is mine, my friend, and should be yours." ARISTIDES. 44 No. 10. t I am next. not ready for the spies yet. I have a few words to say I , reserve them for on the issue of the my exami- Bank bv the committee before * ^1 which Whitney was sent by Col. Benton to appear. The chairman of that committee, the reader knows, was Judge nation into the affairs of the Clayton, of Georgia, a leading member of the Jackson party. His report, which, as the reader also knows, was responded to by the minority of that committee, at the head of which was Mr. M'Duffie, and by a report from a member of that committee, Mr. Adams and so effectual were these reports, and the facts on which they were based so overwhelming so ; Bank from the charges and contained in implications Judge Clayton's report, that a bill both of Houses passed Congress to re-charter the Bank. entirely did they vindicate the Goaded almost by such a succession of defeats, own, the President gave out that the Bank had bribed Congress! The Globe sent round the charge. The affiliated presses echoed it. " If I had been venal, said the President, I should have sold myself to desperation from Woodbury's and to its designs." Having Hill's to his How mad he got Bank, ! failed to secure the to be used as a political instrument to carry on the designs of "the party," as have been the post office, the land office, and the whole official patronage of the government, it became necessary, on the principle which prompts the incendiary, haying fired the house and thrown the torch from his hand, to cry "fire;" and the thief to join the cry "stop thief," for the President and his associates to set up the cry that the Bank had joined the league against him, and was employing its power to prevent This was as much as to his re-election to the Presidency. now is your antagonist, "here say to his army of office holders, you are supine, or neglect to give all diligence in circulating what the Globe and its associates " The shall publish, and I shall say, we shall be defeated." will be no longer ours, spoils" to which we have succeeded therefore be up and doing, and let every office holder go forth as well as mine : if 45 armed with newspapers, and pamphlets, and speeches, and convince the people that the Bank is employing its great power for the overthrow of our party. He who shall not prove zealous by losing it, (in from him by not only jeopard his office of the cause,) but / will wrest it in this struggle, will the loss virtue of my own power to do so. I will "pun- ish" any officer of mine who shall not prove zealous in assistBank." ing me to carry out my designs against the This was well understood. Hence, when the public press remonstrated against the interference of the officers of the federal government with elections, so far from exciting in the President a disposition to practice upon the doctrine of his inaugural message, in which he inveighs against this very practice, it served to fix every such zealous officer more firmly in his affections, and secure to him additional claims to " re- wards." But to the Report of the Committee, of which Judge Clayton was Chairman. It was sent over the whole country, with notes and anotations. Stage loads of the Globe, filled with every description of poison that could be extracted from that and other, sources, accompanied it. Every where the report, charges were reiterated, Whitney's and all, blasted as he was, until the people were every where literally drugged with them. In vain did the press strive to scatter the proper among the people. A cloud of darkness had been raised, and the power and patronage of the Government, headed by Presidential authority, and guided by it, gave support to those light who were engaged in increasing its darkness. It was of no avail that Congress passed its judgment of condemnation upon the proceedings of the party, and upon Judge Clayton's Report, in a re-charter of the was and Wherever, charged whenever truth, in regard to these calumnies, showed itself, it was hacked and cut to pieces, and trampled in the dust. At last, and in 1834, alarmed, and justly so, at the usurpations of the President, and at his disregard of Congress, (and to Bank Bank. This, as and to bribery. influence, I have said, contempt for the President's slanders against that body) of law, and of justice, and witnessing the encroachments by the President upon the constitution, Judge Clayton was roused feeling 46 into a review of the part he had acted, and stung with reof morse, no doubt, yielded to the most honourable impulse He House of Represenhis with own and hand the head from his severed tatives, own report, and throwing its lifeless trunk into the arms of the party, admonished it, President and all, to ponder on what The following is the speech on that occathey had done our nature. rose in- his place in the ! sion: "Mr. Speaker, to make this is the first fair satisfaction for opportunity that has presented itself wrongs which I believe, I myself, have committed; not from malice, for I entertain that passion against no human being, but from an overwraught and incautious zeal. In my opposition to the Bank, on a former occasion, I have carefully reviewed my remarks, and find reflections which are unworthy of me, and the cause they were designed to They were calculated to wound the feelings of many high and support. honourable men, in, and out, of the Bank, and if such has been the effect, I can offer no higher reparation than the public expression of my regret. I retract every thing personal, whether in fact or tendency, &c. neither a dictate of false pride, nor a dread of even deserved punishment, shall ever interpose between the injury, of which I have been the unguarded I do not cause, and the due retribution necessary to its full atonement. pretend that to this is a sentiment peculiar to myself it exists in every later, is apt to exert its just control. mind some extent, and, sooner or Sir, may yet come when the present chief magistrate shall feel and own its sway. When he shall have reached the repose of private life, removed from the tempests of political strife when he shall have ceased to the day iojlat/erers and sycophants, and standing on the confine where the time past of a long life is to be reviewed in the short span of that which is soon to end if no other wrong, of which he has been the author, be useful shall extort his merited confession, that at least to the injured Duane will wring a repentant sigh. His imagination must wander into the innocent family of that abused individual, from whose quiet bosom he was reluctantly withdrawn, and surveying the peace which he has disturbed, the feelings he has tortured, the friendship with which he has sported, the integrity he has distrusted, the independence he toas despised, and, above all, that if his heart shall spotless reputation his minions have attempted to defame not obey the dictates of the generous sentiment I have described, it will be wanting, greatly wanting, in a principle with which even his fame in battle cannot compare, and will justly reduce the glory of his military for- tunes to an empty pageant." would seem, ought to have sufficed to silence the calumny against the Bank. But like all previous defeats, it served only to increase it. Which of the presses, in the pay This, it 47 of " the Government," dared Where to send this speech among the who dared to lift his voice people? to disabuse those, into whose minds poison from the Report of Judge Clayton had been injected ? Where was the expectis the office-holder ant in waiting for his "reward," for the part he had taken in making it tributary to the overthrow of the Bank, who did not shut his eyes to this speech, and continue, in spite of it, to repeat the foul implications of " the party" against the Bank? That the reader may understand something of the bitter- ness of spirit which operated with the majority of the committee, of which Judge Clayton was Chairman, against the President of the Bank, who had been brought out as standing in the attitude of personal hostility to General Jackson, I extract the following from Mr. Adams' report. Speaking of Mr. Biddle, Mr. Adams says "No scruple had crossed the mind of any President of the United States (during ten years) to deter him from nominating him year after year as a Government Director. Not a voice had ever been raised in the Senate to cause their hesitation to confirm his appointment, and so perfectly in harmony with this confidence, has Keen that of the public, that not a rumour has ever been raised of a prospect, or even of a project for the election of any other person as President in his place. After ten years of fair fame, thus sustained, without an adverse whisper being heard, it has been a source of to the subscriber to see the character and feelings of such a citizen treated by a committee of the House of Representatives, as deep mortification if he had been an inmate fresh issued from a penitentiary, to preside over Bank of the United States!" the a specimen of the spirit of that report which on reflection, seized with his own hand and Judge Clayton, tore in pieces, and dashed to the ground, as " unworthy of This, reader, is and the cause it was designed to support." But as I have said it had been circulating over the country, and poisoning the minds of the people for about two years before its author discarded it. And thus was public confidence sported with and abused And thus were the foundations of the Bank undermined, and thus its presiding officer, and his associates, were covered all over with party political himself, ! venom, the lips principal and most disgusting stream issuing from of President Jackson himself. its ARISTIDES. 48 No. 11. "Directors!" exclaimed Mr. Calhoun, in his powerful speech in the Senate, on the removal of the deposites, and in reference to H. D. Gilpin, John T. Sullivan, Peter "Directors, did I say? Co. No (J Spies, is Wager & their proper ' designation." have shown that Reuben M. Whitney was the chosen Thomas H. Benton I will now show that the "spies" were the chosen instruments of President Jackson. What sort of work they were commissioned to perform, will be exposed in the sequel. How long these "spies" had been secretly at work, and in conveying to their employer the result of their labours, and under whose influence, I have no means of ascertaining but their regular, and published commissions, bear date, the first, "April 14, 1833," the second, "August 3, 1833." Both are signed "Andrew Jackson." That there may be no mistake touching the object of these commissions, and the nature of I instrument of Col. ; the employment required by them, I will copy so these notable documents as will illustrate both. The following is the whole of the first, which much from is dated at It is addressed to " Messrs. Sullivan, Gilpin, Washington. and Wager, United States Bank Directors." " Your letter of the 8th instant has been received. i been at work, tion requested beyond the it is for me my In reply, I knowledge of the Government Directors. lation of the charter, If the CC7" (They had have to remark, that the informaown satisfaction, and I do not wish it extended appears.) rumours I In case of a gross vio- duty to issue a scirc facias against the Bank. have heard be true, it will probably be incumbent on it is my and those rumours relate to proceedings which must have come within the personal knowledge, or (/* observation, of some of you. If they shall be confirmed by your report, I shall not only be able to judge to do so; my particular duty, but may, if thought proper, cause to be made,, through the Secretary of the Treasury, that more formal and thorough investigation- Q^ which you suggest. of " In conclusion, would remark, that the discounts granted to indivito constitute those private accounts, which by the charter are so carefully guarded? but that provision only embraces the debtor, and creditor ACCOUNTS of individuals on QC/" the books of the Sank. If any discounts be CORRUPTLY, or improperly granted, it is not only duals, are not I deemed 49 deemed right, but, in aggravated cases, the fact to communicate the tors to duty of the government direc- THE GOVERNMENT." ANDREW (Signed) REMARKS In the first President's wish was Off THIS FIRST COMMISSION TO THE JACKSON. "SPIES." place, the information requested was for the satisfaction; but in getting at it, he did not own to excite the attention of the other directors to hence it be so secretly managed, as not to extend beyond "the knowledge of the government directors." In the next place, the President announces what, under a particular state of the case, he understands to be his ''duty." It is in case of a gross violation of the charter to issue a scire facias. The President has, in instances almost without num- ber, and under forms as various as the prismatic hues, charged " upon the Bank, not only a gross violation of the charter," but gross violations of it but that keen sense of " duty" has never been sufficient to induce him to fulfil its requirements. The the reason Bank. is obvious. Hence no There was no evidence to commit scire facias was sued. In the third place, "rumours" had reached this functionary. This nobody doubts. They fell upon the President like snow flakes, and were made to sound in his ears like could not have been otherwise, rumbling thunder. It when he stood always ready such as were prepared to with "rewards" in his hand to pay join in his crusade against the Bank. He proceeded to pin a knowledge of the truth of those rumours upon his selected " says they must have come within the personal or of some of you." Not to " know" observation knowledge of them after that, would be to belie the President; something and not to have " observed' 7 them, would indicate supineness and inattention. In either case, they very well knew they spies. He would lose their employer's favour, and be forever thereafter excluded from executive "rewards." So they had, as the sequel will show, to "know" even more than had ever been rumoured, and to have "observed" what had been not only the most revolting and criminal, but until then, unimaginable proceedings, &c. In the fourth place, these " 7 spies" had themselves been 50 secretly conveying something, for they had suggested before their commission arrived, a thorough investigation " through the Secretary of the Treasury ." In conclusion, the President shows that he had been in close communion with Reuben M. Whitney. He did not want to know any thing about discounts granted to individuals. But that (although " the charter so carefully guarded these private accounts,) was afterwards made by the President, through one of his examining committees, an indispensable part of the meditated examination." He wanted, it seems, know what discounts had been made that had not been entered on the books of the Bank, or which had been " corruptly" or "improperly" granted. Here then is a direct reto I have treated in No. 9, and which Reuben M. Whitney swore so awfully about. These are the sort of things the President considers his, by telling the "spies" it was their duty to communicate to the "government" that is, to Andrew Jackson, for he said he want- ference to the cases of which ; ed this information for his This then no loss to is the first understand of the second as may own satisfaction. commission. The scope and object. further illustrate the reader will be at Now its "Rip Raps, August 3, 1833." Messrs. Sullivan, Gilpin and Wager. at the first. It is for so This is much dated addressed also to "Gentlemen, I am informed that there is a book of expenses kept at the Bank, which comes before the dividend committee semi-annually. If any of you have had, or can have access to that book, I should be glad to were the expenses of the last year, and also the preceding year, what particulars incurred. ALL directors have a right to see, and inspect this book, and if it is refused to (XJ^THK GOVERNMENT DIHECTOES, OCj* report the same to ME. " Mr. Walsh admitted in his paper, that his publisher had received about learn what and for $1,000 for printing newspapers, calculated to operate on Jj' the elections. This leads me to believe that a considerable sum of the expenses of the Bank has been incurred in this way." President goes on then to expatiate upon " his duty," and to tell his "spies" what agency he is bound to exercise over The the business of the fl desire that you Bank he then ; will obtain says and furnish : me a statement of the Bank 51 They are the accounts of a public institution's exand proper appropriation of which must dethe honest penditures, upon pend, to some extent, the confidence which the administrators of Govern- account of expenses. repose in it. I should consider it proper, and an examination of these accounts should be denied, by the officer keeping them, to demand a view of them by motion at the board of directors. If it be refused, then report the same forthwith to ment may feel at liberty to even Qj" YOUR ME DUTY, and, at the same if time, give me ALL the information and knowledge, in the discharge regard to the accounts which you may have acquired of your duty, as directors," &c. in ANDREW (Signed) JACKSON. REMARKS ON THIS SECOND COMMISSION TO THE "SPIES." first place we are to infer, that if General Jackson " had not been informed" that the Bank kept an expense account, he would never have considered such a book as makIn the next place he seems to coning part of its records sider it an affair of so mysterious and private a character, as In the ! to make access to it it. doubtful whether the "spies" had, or could have He seems to have fancied that the discoveries which that mysterious " expense book" would lead, would not only conclude the whole matter of the Bank's iniquity, but that these secret sins, when discovered, would be of a character so damning as to enable " the Government," wheto ther at Washington or the Rip Raps, to whistle down the in a jiffy. This expense book was a beautiful vision, Bank wag had "informed" the President was kept by and of the existence of which he hastened to inform Bank, "Get that book, if you can you have a right to spies. and in case of its being refused to it, and to inspect it that some the the see the Government directors, report the same to me !" Thunder and lightning what vengeance was gathered ! under that idea of refusal ment Directors !! ! to report that It it needed only for the Govern- was refused to them for the break out and consume the wrath to whole concern. "Report the same to ME!" When the book was all the while as open to all the directors, as was the This indeed was a tempest in a tea pot. light of Heaven. lightning of Jackson's In the next place, among YAe rumours that had reached the President, was one of a most unforgiving character. A 52 thousand dollars he says upon the admission of Mr. Walsh, had been paid to him for printing newspapers. Out of this pops the inference, that "a considerable sum of the expenses of the bank has been incurred in this way for the purpose of operating on the elections!"" The reader may be surprised, perhaps, on being assured, that Mr. Walsh never ad(fcj mitted any such thing!!! We " shall see in the sequel what a marvellous use the how grateful their returns were to "the government." The only "duty" of the President growing out of his relations to the bank, was that spies" made of this expense book, and which bound him, in the event of a violation of its charter, to sue out a scire facias. Yet we find him tumbling like a blind man pursued by an alligator, or stung by reptiles, into apartments where his presence was no more justifiable than would be that of an elephant, whose keeper should lead this unwieldly beast into the President's own drawing room. Yet harping upon the doubt whether his "spies" could get a sight of these accounts, that were as open to them, as was the door through which they entered to take their seats at the board, he enforces it, as a "duty" binding them, "should they be denied, not by the board of directors only, but even officer keeping them," to report the same forthwith to him! And lastly, whether they can get a sight of them or " the not, (for such is the sense of the reading,) the "spies" are re- quired to give all the information and knowledge, in regard them, which they may have acquired. Having thus opened the way, and shown the sort of power, and whence it emanated, which was conferred on the "spies," I shall in my next proceed to show how faithfully and satisJUSTICE and TRUTH, factorily to every thing except HONOUR, to they executed the trust reposed in them. ARISTIDES. 53 No. 12. " have shown the commissions under which the spies" acted. It were difficult to conceive it possible, on a review of them, how men, professing to be honourable, and to be influenced by those principles which uphold the moral and soI compacts, could, for a single moment, hesitate as to the course which it became them to pursue; or question the oblicial gation which the spirit and object of the commissions imposed upon them which was, indignantly and with contempt, to throw them under their not possible to conceive how, without some overpowering inducement, the work required to be performed could be undertaken. Subsequent events demonstrate what that inducement was. As in the case of Sullivan, who was Presidential favouf, It feet. is 'rewarded' for the part he took, by and by official station and emoluments has Mr. Gilpin, the active spiarmy; paymaster rit of the league, in the nomination for the office of Governor of Michigan. It is true, *he Senate rejected both. But hisin the as tory has not been more which Judas agreed Arnold consented to than it will which the be in 'spies' so faithful in recording the price for and that for which to betray his Lord, struggling and bleeding country, the nature of the 4 rewards' for recording consented to obey the requisition of Presisell his dent Jackson. Even General Jackson questioned the propriety of his demands upon these men. He certainly saw the de- grading nature of the work in which he sought to enlist their and apprehending that they might refuse to comply, enforced his claims upon them by insisting that obedience on their part was their 'duty.' The same as if he had said 'I know, this is a low business that it involves gentlemen, services, degrading services man knows the character and offices of a spy, no how to appreciate than I do but, gentlethere are times when the country needs the services of men, in which spies emergency, it is 'the duty' of those who love better engage even in such employment. 'The menaced. The Bank has made war upon it. 'Ru- their country to party' is mours' confirm this. I exact it of you, therefore, as 'Govern- 54 ment Directors,' to need not repeat FRIENDS that ' they to engage in the service I you my maxim 1 have planned. WILL REWARD I MY nor hint to you, (having read the Scriptures,) and if you not for us, are against us' who are refuse to be 'for us' in this business, especially where duty' binds you, you will be numbered with my enemies and * pun' ished' accordingly. .For and punishes his Andrew Jackson 'rewards his friends, enemies." The revelation of the President's will being thus made, and being fully invested with his commissions, and after consultation and agreement, as to the course they should pursue in the SECRET examination now to be made of the acts of the Bank, and especially of the 'Book of Expenses,' the spies began the work. I fancy I see them enter the Bank. They are mailed in a but cloak of seoresy is thrown over Presidential authority it and them. They seat themselves at the board, and bow, and smile, and pass round among their unsuspecting and honourable associates, the usual salutations. Not a whisper of their design is breathed to any other Director of the Bank, whilst each of these honourable men sit in unsuspecting con- fidence their sides. by Stealthily do they go to work. This part of their commission was never for a moment lost sight of. All was to be "confined to the knowledge of the Government Directors." There, too, were the officers of the Bank, each employed* at his desk, faithfully and honourably, and without Even the clerk who had attracted so much of suspicion. General Jackson's attention, and who was looked upon in the light of some stiff, uncomplying confidential fellow, who it was thought was the sworn keeper of that 'expense book,' not even did he suspect who they were that were coming in and going out, wearing the exterior of Directors of the Bank, when in fact they were the secret and commissioned spies of Andrew Jackson Never did sleeping innocence lie in more unconscious state, when the robber hung over her with the drawn dagger, to strike home the fatal blow, should she awake ! and to a sight of the ravages that were going did than the President and the other Directors of the Bank, on, to consciousness, 55 these " spies" were secretly and silently engaged in picking out from the acts of the board, and from that " expense book," such items as they supposed and its officers and when clerks, would most effectually serve their employer, and gratify his taste, and bring down destruction upon the Bank, and all that related to it ! For nearly two months were these men thus employed, before their unsuspecting associates were awakened to an observation of what was going man on. During know what this period, it is not and doubles were resorted to by the "spies;" nor how, when an occasional ray from the almost extinguished light of honour, would dart in upon their minds, they recoiled from the business they had given to mortal to shifts How stirring, sometimes, was a glance from How cutting the rebuke, when the President Biddle's eye honest labours of thfi other Directors, (headed by their efficient President, all of whom the " spies" knew to be honourundertaken. ! able men,) were witnessed. Meeting the first, there was no alternative but to drum with the fingers on the table, or perhaps to whistle ; and on beholding the last, to bow, or yawn. Or when a clerk would pass, and they were hurrying secretly through the papers, hunting for items, there would be a sudden huddling of the whole together, and a bow, accompanied with a smile, or some act to turn aside suspicion as to what these men were about. At last, and at about the expiration of the eighth week of suck labours, the newspapers revealed the plot? Instantly the cloaks which had hitherto secreted their design, fUl off; and the "spies" had character. sions. to They were, meet it is their associates in their true by their commishowever, against men feel, when a spy true, screened These furnished but a flimsy shield, the justly excited indignation, which all detected in the camp. Flash after flash, like lightning, blazed in upon the consciences of these men ; and a deadly is sinking of all the moral energies foreboded the judgment, not of the board, only, but of all civilized and Christian people. This was a horrible hour it. But the best was to be made of About the persons of the spies hung dangling the items ! 56 they had abstracted, thus secretly, from the records of the Bank; and in their faces men ? fortunate was visible that peculiar hue, What now was succeeds detection. left for which these truly un- That was made was feared, if they had avowed Board would not have permitted its exeNothing but confession ! in the declaration that "it their objedf, the cution!" A report of their proceedings was now to be made to their employer. Any undertaking commenced, and prosecuted under such hurried and flurried circumstances, could not, of There could be neither order, regucourse, be well done. larity or correctness. They had, however, kept the secret, duty of a spy. President Jackson could not reproach them with divulging it. But it seems to have been thought, even by themselves, that what they had done, and that is the first was not well done. of time" Hence the " " the spies" speak of want and of the "labour," which the mode imposed upon them required. They could only prosecute their object, they " and OPas say, they had "time, and opportunity." PORTUNITY!" These words, in such like business, are TIME extremely ominous, as well as confessional. What else does the highwayman seek ? Any thing but " time and opportudo they not seek for nity!" or the slanderer, or calumniator was all that Arnold wanted, when of Andre. Both occurred, but "time" "time and opportunity*?" It he sought the services was denied the unfortunate youth to escape with the hellish was refused him to get plot of his seducer and "opportunity" out of the hands of the three patriots who intercepted, and ; captured him. The " spies" say, they made "enquiries, but they were partial" Of course, if they had been general, there would have been a disclosure and then the truth, and the whole truth, would. have been told, which was exactly, as the sequel will prove, what these men were not in quest of, and what ; their employer did not want. When, however, they came across any expenditures, they take care to say they were "discovered by US." As a matter of course, then, the infer- ence was intended to be incontrovertible, that they had been 57 Sometimes, when they requested any thing not as spies but as directors, and the good sense of the board led it to withhold its assent, why then they excuse themselves, by saying, they had " to depend on their concealed before ! of the hoard own partial enquiries." , From this very partial picture, the reader may-infer, how much of honour actuated these men. I will pursue the subject in my next. ARISTIDES. No. 13. necessary that I should inform the reader that, in discussing the acts of public men, the actors must, themselves, be spoken of? Can the criminal be separated from his crime? Is it Or if he can, ought he to be? Who can separate the shadow from the substance? Tell me not of that mawkish sensibility that, when the acts of public men are spoken of, would whisper "silence" as the names of the perpetrators are about to be pronounced. If men in official stations will employ themselves in undermining the great principles of honour, of justice, and of truth, let them not take it amiss when public opinion resolves to hold them responsible for such outrage^. Those who would throw over such the mantle of concealment, little think how much they contribute to destroy those safe-guards upon which society has been taught to rely for protection against wrong and outrage. What hide the public plunderer from the public gaze separate him from all connexion with the public judgment and denounce his acts only? discourse only about the evil he may have committed, and not name the author of it? Establish this doctrine, and where, 1 a^k, shall ! we go for a shield to protect either property, character, or life? I have named "the Government Directors" Jackson employed whom President perform the office of "spies." 1 have shown by their commissions, under which they consented to act, and did act, that the "duty" required of them was to be to 58 \ performed secretly, and without the knowledge of the other These commissions required it of those to whom were addressed, to spy out, and report to Andrew Jackthey acts as "rumour" had informed him the Bank was such son, which acts, he took special care to tell his "spies," guilty of, Directors. know something about. Believing that these men moved Andrew Jackson to commit upon the Bank the outrage they must he removal of the Deposits, and in separating the which bound him to the laws, and the laws to him, I consider it a high and solemn duty, in some one, to trace out their conduct, and expose the means they adopted to produce such did, in the ties a result. the this. The violated rights of assailed characters of the Presi- Public justice requires Bank plead for it. The dent and officers of the Bank, have a high claim to be vindiand the violated honour of the nation demands it. cated, I have said these men moved Andrew Jackson to commit the outrage he did commit on the Bank. I derive my proof from himself. He says, explicitly, that the reports of these men, to him, decided the question in his mind, and produced How fearful, then, is the resolve to remove the deposits. responsibility that rests upon th'em! the given a glimpse of the honour which actuated these tnen, in "the mode" they consented to adopt in Let us look, complying with the terms of their commissions. I have, in my a moment, and Truth. for last, at the relations in which they stand to Justice What is it? That principle, I answer, which man a to do to others, that, which he would have prompts others do to him. Let us try the "spies," first, by this standJustice! They knew that a against the Bank and its ard. They ke w also party political officers, that this spirit its President. They had all own party had taken to de- was witnessed the course which their spirit particularly was excited vindictive. Bank, and implicate the honour of its officers. There not one of them that did not know that all this was the an result of a refusal on the part of the Bank to lend itself as stroy the was instrument to promote the ends of "the party." They were, as "Government Directors," in a situation, in which, they , 59 could increase this excitement, or allay it. Justice, under such circumstances, made to them a direct appeal. On their report, on the truth or falsehood of the charges, was destined to turn, the personal and official judgment of their employer. Facts, under such circumstances, ought alone to have been resorted to. They were alone competent to decide the question. Here then stood these men. Can the reader conceive a position more responsible, or one in which honour, and justice, and truth, could all more effectually combine, to enforce their demands. They were made by their position, and by their commission (as they chose to respect it as such, and act under it) not the judges only, but executioners of the Bank! I know Col. Ben ton claims this honourbut Andrew Jackson awards it to his "spies." He says, they decided him. fancy I see these men port to President Jackson. when engaged in writing their reBefore their judgment passed the claims of the stockholders, who were entitled to all the benefit which a just and true report would ensure to them. By one I dash of the pen, the value of the stock was to be affected. for the Bank, it be depressed. would enhance it; if against The government was here it, If, the stock would interested, or in other words, the people, for they held a fifth of the stock. Then came the characters of the officers of the Bank. These assailed Next came the general embardeeply. rassments of the whole country, the failure of men, and the necessarily prostrating effects that must attend upon the had been withdrawal of the country. fifty millions from the circulating currency of of the Auctioneer was seen to The hammer rise and to fall; the rich were seen buying up the buildings and other property, at a reduced price, which the mechanic had built, and purchased, partly on credit, for his family manufacturers were seen to stop, and commerce tolanguish and public confidence every where shaken, and men every where in embarrassment and trouble! All this, and more, was present, when the report was to be made. There was, no doubt, an occasional twinge of the conscience, as one after another of the points were decided on and when it was determined so to colour the report as to convince General Jack- 60 was right, and the Bank was all, and a good deal more than he had suspected, even when assisted by his "rumours," there Was, doubtless, that shiver felt, which attends upon men's last agonies, wh'en they die a forced and ignomison that he nious death! The report signed, and the work done, it only remained for the "spies" to watch the effects of that mildew which they knew it would enable the President Bank and its affairs. to breathe over all that related to the Let the reader pause hgre for a moment, and contemplate the position of the Government Directors, and theif power for evil, and for good, and ask himself if an obligation was ever more binding, or more holy upon men to do JUSTICE. There lives not a stockholder, nor an officer of the Bank, that would not have said, "Justice, gentlemen, is all ice ask" But was it justice to go in and out for eight weeks, with the other Directors, appearing to be of them, and watching, like them, over the great interests of the Bank, with which were so intimately connected, the great interests of the country, when they were employed, under a secret commission, in ab- stracting detached items from the records of the Bank, upon which ing in to base charges for its condemnation? Was this actto that would that men conformity golden rule, "as~ye Was it not rather should do to you, do ye even so to them!" of that rule? Was it not rank injustice? a subversion If the other directors had been convicted felons, in league, ach with the other, to exclude their acts from all eyes but their own, and the government directors had reason to believe such to and that their acts were working Bank, and to the interests of the stockwould have been their 'duty' to adopt any be the fact, prejudicial effects to the holders, then it practica^ mode a knowledge of the real condition its managers. But were On the contrary, the President, and Directors, such men? were they not, and are they not, all of them, honourable to arrive at of the Bank, and of the conduct of men now capable men and did they not then, and do they not devote themselves to promote the interests of the stock- holders, and the welfare of the dealers of the Bank? Were 61 they not even then, as now, careful to watch the calumnies that were sent among the people to injure the Bank, and to send truth after them, as fast as they could, to neutralize, and, if possible, put a stop to their ruinous tendency and effects? Are not these gentlemen, in a word, in all their private, and social, and official relations, among the most estimable of our Then what do these high minded and honourable men race? say of the reports of the "spies" to their employer? But first, what did the "spies" report? Why, among other things, that theiy examination which President Jackson referred to them to make, [I have shown in my last what sort of 'examination' it was, and how it was conducted] (jl^^'tJndoubtedly presents circumstances which in our opinion, warrant the belief you have been led to entertain.' And what was that belief? Why, that the Bank had employed itself and its means in a way to influence the elections the General Jackson's re-election, among rest. The commission was to elicit something on press, urged by General Jackson, might rest the charge. Every circumstance, therefore, had a channel sole object of their on which the cut for Comit, to swell the general tide upon this point. were made the other Directors. plaints against They were charged with concealments, &c. In a word, every thing was reported that could be an implication of the fered in the elections. The made subservient to the .ggeat end, viz: Bank on the charge of having interI could prove this by numerous quo- may find what I say substantially confirmed in the report of the "spies" to their employer. What say the other Directors? tations. reader "Nothing was concealed no one designed to conceal no one could conceal this whole matter. The resolutions of the board were on the minutes the expenses under them were all recorded in the book the vouchers all referred to, by number, in that book; and all of them, minutes, expense book, and vouchers, were (C/'ALWAYS to be seen and examined by the Directors, so that the whole process of discovery was to dj'ask for the books and vouchers, and to receive them." Is one there a to whom man living that doubts the truth of this? Not known, on There was the open the character of the Directors whose veracity the statement rests. is C2 which honourable men would have preferred to But truth was not the object of either President JackIf it had been, why did he enjoin secrcsy son or his "spies." on them; and why, with these means all open to their inspecPresident tion, did they choose to climb up some other way? Jackson knew, and his u spies" knew, that the truth would be door, into enter. death to the scheme, which was to implicate the Bank on the charge I have named, of interfering to control the This was, as I have said, the great object; and for were the "spies" Now They set to elections. t-his duty work. what sort of use they made of one sum. "Under the head of stationary and printing, they let us see say: have discovered charges for the first half of the year 1831, amounting to the enormous sum of $29,979 92." The inference intended to be conveyed t6 General Jackson was, that this "enormous sum" bore on the point of their enquiry, and that it had been employed in connection with the charge of interfering in elections. how do you suppose this "enormous sum" was for what? 1 will tell you. and expended? $1080 32 was for common stationary, " 443 76 printing blank forms and rules, " 267 68 books, Well, reader, 179 4178 +. 300 2886 : 91 % " 37 " 00 " 67 1421 94 2121 64 " 788 13 10 00 " " newspapers, engraving bank notes, paper, silk for making paper, sheeting for silks silks do. do. do. subscription to the Coffee House. $13,678 42 Well, now, how much of these items, which, I assure the reader, forms part of the 'enormous sum' of $29,979 92, is it believed was expended with the remotest design to operate on the elections? Look at the items. Sullivan, one of the Go- vernment Directors, who signed the report that carried this 63 'enormous sum' to General Jackson, and which was sent purposely to implicate the Bank in the charge I have stated, had himself received of these very expenditures, under one of its heads, $302 37 or for what ! ! But every item, no matter to whom paid, hy whom received, was essential to swell ! paid, or the sum, and make the amount 'enormous' hence, although pocket, for articles in his own line of business, furnished the Bank, hg was willing that it he had put $302 37 in his own should form part of the 'enormous sym' that the President was left to INFER the Bank had paid in furthering the ends of those who opposed the election of Andrew Jackson, and of his I will not stop to inquire where a man's conscience, party. or sense of common honesty, is, who would lend himself to such an act as this. The balance of the $29,000 and odd, had about as little to do with controlling elections, as that which was expended, as above stated. Nearly $4000 of the residue was paid for printing and circulating Mr. Gallatin's able work on Banking; and the residue on documents essential to be sent among the people to disabuse them of falsehoods uttered by President Jackson against the Bank, and reiterated by his presses and his party but for which falsehoods, and the levelling doctrines on which they were made to rest, there would not have been one cent expended. The crime is, to be sure, a curious one, that so constituted by the act of an individual, or corporation, taking measures to repel calumny and refute injurious and is vicious falsehoods. and figures for my next, in further and demonstrative of the absence of from the consciences these men of both justice and truth, I have some other facts illustration of this subject, while in the performance of the service assigned to them by President Jackson. ARISTIDES. 64 No. 14. I am aware that the light in tors' are put, is repulsive. I which ' know, the also, government it is direc- calculated to sympathy but it can, of course, be that species of sympathy only, which men feel for the criminal, when the sentence of the law, which he has violated, is enforced. But excite shall this species of a shield to sympathy be permitted interfere to operate as between the culprit and his merited He who says YES, has not well considered the It had as well be decided, that there ought to subject. just be NO law; or, what amounts to the same thing, no penalty. punishment? What is a law without a penalty and penalty, ? And what are both law they be not enforced. Does the reader think, I do not myself feel deeply for these "spies?" If he do, he wrongs me. I do, from my very if soul pity them! monstrating the But having undertaken arid this business of de- outrage, that have been committed CHARACTER of men, and upon the wrong, on one of the best fiscal agents that this or any other country ever possessed, and through it, upon the rights and interests of its stockholders, and the general prosperity, painful as it is, I shall proceed, until I make manifest to all who are intelligent and honest, (I expect no- thing from the fool or the knave,) that a most damning fraud has been committed by 'the party,' through its INSTRUMENTS, that fiscal agent; upon the rights and interests of its stockholders; upon the character of its officers, and upon the upon general prosperity. If, in the further prosecution of do not mean any thing shall turn light my me purpose, from which I throw a aside, I shall even more repulsive, upon 'the government directors,' and cast even a more odious shade upon their doings, they will find the elements which I may embody, in their own acts, and the colouring matter I use, in their own party reck- lessness. Some may suppose meant to convey it to their impossible for the "spies" to have employer, that the $29,979 92 had been employed for the purpose of controlling the elections. EdA Iso CSB variants: UCSB Lila. 181 rev.) arpocket, and wliich he knew liau ucen paid lor ticles of his trade, which the Bank bought of him. in his own 1 9 of ge 111. thi hae up< sto get ] do ligl and wil acts les< 5 me; (^v^ 1 been employed for the purpose of controlling the elections. 65 For the. satisfaction of such, I will prove, by their own words, that they did so intend; and that they intended NOTHING ELSE. Hear them: ." We deemed it gation to that portion which expedient, at presenf, to confine our investi- EMBRACED expenditures QCj" CALCULATED TO OPERATE ON THE ELECTIONS." Now, what does the reader think? Almost- the first ques- were all these tion that an intelligent reader will ask, will be items for stationary, printing blank forms; for books, for engraving bank notes, &c. &c. 'calculated to operate on the elections?' and especially, were the three hundred and odd dollars were paid by the Bank to Sullivan, for articles in the line of his business, and which formed a part of this very 29,000 and odd dollars, 'calculated to operate on elections?' ^ But this is not all. The "spies" tell their employer that " All expenditures of (J THIS kind, (made to operate upon that the elections,) introduced into the expense account, and discovered by us, we found to be, so far as regards the institution in this city, embraced under the head of Stationary and Printing." Now let us analyze this a little. Not only were expendi- tures made, according to the "spies," Ho operate tions,' but they were entered under the head of on the elec' Stationary and Printing' and though thus ingeniously contrived, the true nature and object of these expenditures, were DCf3 'discovered by us.' But this was not all. The drift of the information was intended to convey to -their employer's mind the belief that ness of ALL the branches were engaged in the same busito operate on the election/ for making 'expenditures what the "spies" reported, regarded only, 'THE INSTITUTION IN THIS CITY.' there will be no more doubt on any body's mind as what were the object and aim of the "spies." Thus it was, that "the enormous sum" of 29,000 dollars was reported as been to the on the elechaving Bank, expended by "operate tions," even to the 300 and odd dollars that Sullivan had put I trust to in his ticles own pocket, and which he knew had been paid for arof his trade, which the Bank bought of him. 9 66 A most remarkable feature in this case is, that the miscellaneous expenses in the item of 29,979 92 could not, as the Board of Directors very appropriately remarks, 'have been spent on elections, from the fact that in the first half year of 1831, no elections of any kind, in which the Bank could, by possibility, have any interest, were impending for eighteen months .to come, or even in remote agitation.' But no " Rumour" had told President Jackson matter, otherwise, and any were compelled, by virtue of their employment, hoped for "rewards," to sustain it. I said I had some more facts and figures for this number. If they were not facts and figures, I would myself discard them. But they are. Either these are lalse, or the "spies" are. The his "spies" and its reader shall decide. The "spies" Bank for the " It say appears by the expense account of the years 1831 and 1832, that upwards of $80,000 Were expended" " STA- For what? TIONARY AND PRINTING" head that and charged, under that the head so denominated, but which, as "disThe us," was to. "operate on the elections." is, covered by "spies" further "discover" that a "large proportion" of this 80,000 dollars was paid to the proprietors of newspapers, and periodical journals; and for the printing, distribution, and postage of immense numbers of pamphlets and newspapers." Let the reader connect with their own this "discovery" of the "spies" declaration that they "deemed it expedient to confine their interrogatories to that portion which embraced expenditures calculated to operate on elections/' and then decide whether the charge was not distinctly made that the Bank had employed these 80,000 dollars, or a "large'portion If this concluof it," in electioneering against "the party." denied, then does he who denies it implicate the understanding of President Jackson himselffor he so interpreted sion it, is and he so said functionary are: in his famous manifesto. " The The words expenditures purporting to of this have been made under authority of these resolutions, (resolutions of the Board authorising the President of the Bank to expend money to detect and expose calumnies,) during the years 67 1831 and 1832, were about 80,000 dollars." Now suppose had been true, which, by the way, it happens not to be> it would prove no more than that calumnies had multiplied ; this it required an "enormous" expenditure on the part But it was false of the bank to detect and expose them. and that (I do not mean false, as calumregards the multiplication of on which the sum was expended) nies, but as to the objects for of this very sum there were paid for printing bank notes, Printing blank forms, and other necessary Making and 1,848 OS 6,053 8 papers, Books and stationary, Various miscellaneous expenses, Total, This is demonstration. $24,591 96 653 25 $33,147 17 Euclid himself could not more clearly detect a falsehood in figures/than this simple statement detects and exposes the rank falsehood of the "spies." A few words on the cause of the expenditure of a cent by for any thing else except for its necessary materials. It is to be found exclusively in the calumnies which commenced in 1829, and which followed its refusal to throw itself into the arms of "the party," to be used by it as a tool. At every point was its credit, its honour, and the fair fame of Driven by the necessity of the case, the its officers assailed. the Bank in its own defence, in the years 1829, 1830, and 1832, 1831, 1833, $58,265 04, or an average of between eleven and twelve thousand dollars af year, not in interfering Bank employed in elections, but in detecting and exposing calumnies. Now the "spies" knew. The use they made of it, I have On the question which ignorance and prejudice exposed. have started as to the right of the Bank thus to defend itself, all this whether against calumniators of counterfeiters, I will dismy next, promising, meanwhile, to demonstrate, as between calumniators and counterfeiters, the forthat, course in mer required to be watched with ten-fold vigilance; and that of the two, in moral guilt, and infamy, and ability, to injure the Bank, the counterfeiter was the less exceptionable character. ARISTIDES. 63 No. 1C.* The reader will "be at no loss to discover what has been my object in-tracing as have partisans how assailed effectual they have done, the calumnies with which Bank; and all the world knows I the have proved This is a undermining that incomcommentary on the moral condition of the public mind! It would seem that when men, otherwise estimable, good citizens, kind husbands, affectionate brothers, and faithful friends, become inparable institution. vested with a little brief in fearful Governmental authority, there passes over them a blinding influence, which closes their eyes to every thing, except that which may promote their own and their employer's ends. Or, why, deavoured if it Now, why, (and whether be so ask, should this be so? I it is so or-not, I have en- to let facts decide) should there be the slightest objection in those who permit themselves to bethus blinded, or in the mind of any just and honest man, to such a discussion of the subject as shall expose it in its deformity, and in the recklessness with which the spirit that sustains it manifests itself. It was intention in this my number to institute a compari- son between the evil effects of calumny, and of counterfeiting, and to demonstrate that in the relation which these two bear to the and to Bank, that calumny that if it is its expend ing money more dangerous enemy; Bank-j-(and who will deny this?) is a right in the tenfold in detecting counterfeiters, itself agsinst their dojngs, the obligation is and protect- no less binding expend money, detecting and exposing upon it, calumnies. But I waive, this point for the present, to expose the origin and analyze the cause of these calumnies, which have been so multiplied of late, and employed with such efalso, in to fect against the I have no commenced, Bank and engine against the * its interests. They were not difficulty in finding their origin. however, with any view to use this monstrous Bank Erroneously numbered. {J It but to break should have been 15. series, or to disturb the references, 16 is preserved. down Not the party to break the 69 then in power and build up another. The success of the experiment was so complete, that when the Bank was to be assailed, calumny was resorted to, and employed, as the great instrument to produce its downfal. I trace the first bold and reckless calumny, the calumny which may be denominated the fruitful mother of the thousands that have since been sent around the country, to Col. Thos. H. Bentor, of the U. S. Senate. It is to be found in famous letter, usually denominated the East Room Letter. " The party," the present dominant party, I mean, was then his its just beginning struggle for the ascendancy. It was daily and hourly employed in finding out causes of complaint Truth could not be employed against the administration. because there was no cause of offence in its acts against it in any of its measures, when ftirly told, to which the people could take the slightest exception. It therefore and nothing became necessary to try a new experiment, and one that had never before, in the history of this government at least, been INVENT FALSEwas, in plain language, to employ presses, subsidized for the purpose, to send them around among the people for truths! It required attempted. HOODS, It and to a daring spirit, a reckless partisan, to commence a war, which, the first demonstration should prove successful, was afterwards to be carried on by the same instrument. all know if We how extremely sensitive the people were at that period on the subject of the right and economical use which they expected the Executive to make of their money; and how (as it was right they should) they resented the slightest departure from the most rigid economy. Well, the to lash into fury this feeling; and by bringing in the expenditures purpose was all its force to bear on President Adams, turn their favourite leader all those guards which to turn him out, and Col. Benton, throwing aside honourable partisans take care to set in. round their acts, came boldly out, and in the very face oT truth, and in utter contempt of what Twenty Thousand persons at moment personally knew, (ior there was not a man in the District of Columbia, and no visiter to the President's mansion, that did not know better,) penned and published a that 70 letter setting forth, in substance, that President at immense had, in famous East room! make Adams a most gorgeous style furnished that The reader sees the object It was to and cost, the people believe that thai Administration made a wanton use of their money, and that republican simplicity was discarded in a word, as the slang of the day was, Mr. Adams was King John; and he must therefore live in regal splendour! ! How strange to tell that calumny was successful ! Whilst not a dollar had been spent on that room, and a studied economy characterized all the expenditures of Mr. Adams, as the world knows. This fabrication usurped the place, and exercised the power of reeled before fierceness, it, truth and from which itself. The people every where arose a flame of unextinguishable ctually consumed to ashes that Adminisit tration. Here then the party calumny could, when possess. It became, knew what power, an artfully invented spiritedly, and perseveringly employed, from that hour, the chosen instrument of the party, as much so as was the battering ram with the people of old, when the wall of a city was to be battered And down. like that ancient engine, be formidable and The Bank had been it has proved itself to variously beset. same out It passed through triumph of the Woodbury drove back the assailants, even including the ExaminIt siege after siege. plot it irresistible. in ing Committee, of which Judge Clayton was chairman It came out -unscathed of the deep plot of a witness sent, as I have shown, by this same Col. Benton, to bear testimony against the President of the Bank, and whose testimony must have, like the lightning, killed the fair fame of President Biddle, and mutilated, if not destroyed the Bank, had not a conductor most happily conveyed the fluid from the line of its direction. I have illustrated this in a previous number. The Bank came and more than I have enumeand had, by a surprising unanimity, considering the party character of the times, its charter renewed. There remained no hope now of the downfal of the Bank, rated, in out of triumph, all this, 71 That was of easy but in the veto of President Jackson. He complishment. that the Bank was had by this time been taught ac- to believe That was enough. But stilj him out in his pur- HIS enemy. there would be wanting reasons to bear pose. older calumnies, though exploded by the action of Congress in the renewal of the Charter, were kept, nevertheless, in perpetual circulation by the presses that had been The subsidized for the purpose, by the office-holders, who knew that their tenure of office, was limited to their exertions; and by those who expected rewarded to be for assisting in their circulation. Among the calumnies originating in this object was that, that the Bank was not a safe depository of which announced the public money. This annunciation was ushered amidst the shouts of' the party.' It was attempted, by means of this to down the batter Bank, officers and all. Nothing, calumny, of course, was supposed to be strong enough to withstand the effects of the doubts intended to be created by this declaration, in the minds of the people. It was as much as to tell them in danger!' 'your money Upon this point the people had It was^intended to confirm to be sensitive. themselves proved' is the truth of the charge; and Mr. Toland, a personal and political friend of the President, was charged to examine and re- He was port upon it. The conspirators mistook their man. honest. No political cawl covered the sight of his eyes;- no He reported the truth; political bias warped HIS judgment. the Bank was view, a perfectly safe depository of the This was, for the moment, a stumper. But in his public money. though sustained by a report of the Committee of the House of Representatives, it was still kept going the rounds among the people, that the Bank WAS public money^and that Gen. NOT a safe depository of the JACKSON HAD SAID At when SO. calumny was uttered, the Bank, as the documents pr.ove, was in the full power of its strength. I would insert the proofs in figures, but am relieved from this the very time necessity, by the namely, that the this promulgation of an opposite calumny; Bank was TOO STRONG, 3 and therefore, 'DANGEROUS TO THE LIBERTIES OF THE PEOPLE!!' game calumny was made to operate just as if not a word said been about the feebleness of the Bank, and the inse- even had Instead of awakening public suspicion as to the was playing with the public confidence, that 'the party' this curity of the public funds. As in the case of Col. Benton's attack on . digal waste of the public Mr. Adams' proby him in a most which the East room illustrated money, extravagant exhibition of the manner in was said by him to be furnished, when not a dollar had been laid out upon it, There was not a nor, in fact, was so with these calumnies against the Bank. particle of truth to support either of them; needed. it The presses, the office-holders the expectants, were now all firmly leagued, to say every thing was true, that the President might choose to utter, or In vain- did truth lift up her supporters to fabricate. voice in this' war of falsehood in vain did justice plead and in vain did the consciences of the abettors in this nefarious his The charges were still sent round. human Every appeal jthat ingenuity could invent, was made to inflame the public mind against the Bank. It was a monowork, smite them. among its stockholders it was opJackson, who for that reason and for no poly- itjiad foreigners posed to Andrew as "a monster." other, denouncedjt "The party" told the people so And was it a monster? under every form of speech- making, and by its press. Some poor ignorant souls, fancied it was a living thing, with horns and a forked tail, and club "Down with feet, and having fire issuing from its mouth. the monster," -was kept going the rounds of the country. Engravings were got up, representing^ President Jackson and Mr. Biddle, as engagetl in. personal combat. All this, like the fire fanned, or blown upon by strong winds, ignited every combustible material, until the purpose was formed, and the plan devised, to throw President Jackson in the foreground of this commotion, where, having taken his stand, he was to of against the decision responsibility the and Mr. of the Toland, against Congress against report unqualified report of the committee of the House of Repre- decide on his own 73 (though proved to be the He did so. would he remove public deposites. false,) He did this in violation of law; and by the usurpation of a sentatives, that for the reasons stated, power more threatening to Republican Liberty, than any thing that has ever occurred previous,or subsequent to the formation, and adoption of the Constitution. But there was one incentive that has not yet been named. It was the prospects which these movements opened, of pecu- niary gain among those who were in the secret of what the President had resolved to do. ed as not to know how this Is there a reader so Bank Stock was I will not pursue this demoralizing view uninform- speculated in, further, nor will name the speculators, at least at present, but will conclude this number by again referring to the power of calumny and falsehood; and how, when they are employed as they have I been, by the profligate, in regard to the Bank, the public may be duped, and deeply, if not irretrievably injured! The very same combination, and the same weapons if employed against our Liberties, would make slaves of us all. ARISTIDES. No. A 17. few, and very few words on Counterfeiters and CaI hold them to be alike criminal. I verily be- lumniators. lieve, nevertheless, that men will, as politicians, as 1 have demonstrated they have done, thousand deaths, rather than counterfeit. calumniate who would My object die is a to expose the gross delusion under which men labour, who, acting on the maxim, that "all's fair in politics," will utter a ca- lumny, and contemplate it in the light of an innocent device, either to obtain or retain power. A counterfeiter, suppose he gets into circulation all the notes he may prepare, injures the Bank, whose notes he represents, to a very trifling extent, for the operation the spurious issue is detected, to 10 make people more is, when cautious 74 in ascertaining the genuineness of the notes offered. falls individuals, The loss who may have been upon upon the Bank, except partially. It cheated, and not has rarely occurred, that the annunciation that counterfeit notes of any Bank were in circulation, produced any depression in the value of the stock Not so with calumnies. They operate upon the stock, as immediately, and as sensibly, as does the atmoNow let us see what effect the sphere upon mercury. of the Bank. have exposed, and the action of President Jackson, who was influenced by them, had on the stock of the Bank. Mr. Calhoun says in his masterly speech on the calumnies that I removal of the deposites, that "the value of scares was reduced from 130 to 108," a Senator near him said, "much more." Now let me ask if all the counterfeiting that has been carried on, of the notes of this Bank, from its origin to day, ever injured so deeply, the interests of the stockHas any body ever questioned the right, or duty, of holders? this Bank to expend money in detecting counterfeiters? Nobody. Can any body assign a single good reason why the Bank should not be equally bound to expend money in disthe abusing the public mind from calumnies which tend so immediately, and to such vast extent, to injure every individual I will suppose a case. Suppose a person, or be appointed by President Jackson, to give him secret information of the acts of the Bank, whether in regard to its expenditure of money, to detect counterfeiters, or rebut stockholder. persons, to And suppose he should be written to in reply, and told that the Bank had expended a large portion of the enormous sum of $80,000 in controlling elections; and that calumnies. President Jackson, on the faith of such a statement, should promulgate his purpose to veto any bill that might be passed for a recharter of a Bank that would thus act? Suppose the Bank to remain perfectly indifferent as to the stock should fall from "130, to 108," and the Supcharge, Directors of the pose that a stockholder, feeling himself aggrieved, should appear at the Bank, and expostulate with the President and Directors, against a conduct so extraordinary, and that he should be shown the proofs that the Bank had done no such thing. 75 Suppose it had never occurred to the Board to disabuse the public mind, except by relying on its denial in Congress, and on the circulation of public documents, and this stockholder had said "Why, gentlemen, if the people in my neighbour- hood could be convinced, as I am, that this is a calumny, their confidence would be restored in the Bank; and its stock, so would be restored to the point calumny dislodged it, and from which it has fallen." Suppose the President of the Bank to reply, "Why, my dear sir, this has been done. Mr. Clay, Mr. Calhoun, Mr. Binney, Mr. Webster, and others, have all declared the charge to be false, and proven it to be false, and fhe Board far as they are concerned, whence this have sent to Washington copies of the very documents I have shown you." Well, I will suppose the stockholder to reply, "That may be, but my neighbours know nothing of all this they do not get the public documents, and very few of any, except our little country papers. Suppose the Board should pass a resolution giving you authority to publish and circulate extra copies of these proofs, used by Mr. Calhoun and others, going to vindicate the Bank, and that you send a few hundred or a thousand to me, for distribution?" And suppose some one to move such a resolution at the Board, and that it was NOT carried and for the want of these very facts, the exhibition of which had satisfied the stockholder of the falsity of the charge made against the Bank, stock should, under the influence of public opinion,, (for that is the mimosa pudica, or the Mercury, which indicates the touch of depressing or elevating influences,) continue thus depressed; and that stockholder being in want of the amount of his stock, for which his stock might be pledged, and he compelled, under such I ask, would he not have reason to sell it circumstances, to Nay, to denounce the President and Directors as unworthy of their trust, and unfitted to manage the great concerns of the Bank? complain of rank injustice? Well, the Board of Directors being intelligent men, competent and just men, and having an eye to the interests of the Bank, instead of refusing to comply with the suggestion of the stockholder, as I have supposed, did NO MORE by comply- 76 for extra Speeches, and extra of the Bank, and vindicating it Documents, exculpatory of effects the calumny, than was its solemn and saagainst cred duty a duty it owed alike to the government and all ing, in the money expended very course, I have no doubt, that public opinion was enabled to sustain the Bank, its other stockholders. It is to this and that the stock of the Bank maintained, against all the attacks upon it, and in spite of the plans of the Speculators, who known have been in the secret at Washington, its But for this, it would have been the subject of perpetual fluctuation;. and the "buyers and sellers," men not a whit better than they whose tables once disgraced the temple at Jerusalem, and which the purest and holiest of sell" beings, overturned, would have continued to "buy and and "make gain;" because they were in the secret, and knew when the spring was to be touched, and when the pressure are price as it to did. upon it was to be withdrawn. I have now briefly endeavoured to illustrate the comparative injury which may be done to a Bank, by Counterfeiters and Calumniators; and the DUTY of the Bank, to guard its inboth terests against but as the greater enemy of the two, against the Calumniator. ARISTIDES. No. 18. object for which the Bank made these expenditures, which the Government Directors asserted to have been made The to control the elections, are natural was it for these men now to penditures the same object, viz : obvious. How have perceived to defend the easy, how in these ex- Bank against calumny, and protect it against counterfeiters. How unnaAnd how equally natural to see them in any other light tural, and at the same time easy of comprehension was it, that when larger expenditures were seen to have been made during election periods, that they were called for by the mul! * tiplicity of calumnies that were sent round, at these periods, 77 But no having been, in their own lanthe people. as devised instruments? and commissioned to perguage, form specific duties, and under a stipulated form, that is, among ' 'without the knowledge of the other Directors,' there was no medium through which the acts of the Bank could be seen, by them, but that which went to 'impair its credit,' and to odium against the other Directors.' One leading deof by these sign would seem never to have been lost sight Government Directors, and that was, by the scintillation of 'excite spark after spark, to fire the magazine of President Jackson's vengeance. They succeeded, as has been before stated, for he says himself they 'decided him.' I will pursue, in this No., some of the means resorted to, The Government Directors say, 'Publications have been prepared, and extensively circulated, con3 the Officers of the taining the grossest invectives against Government and the money which belongs to the stockholdr to effect this object. [O ; ers, and to the public, has been freely applied in efforts to who were supposed to be degrade, instrumental in resisting the wishes of this grasping and danin public estimation, those gerous institution.' What is the answer of Messrs. Willing, Eyre, Bevan, White, Sergeant, Fisher, Lippincott, Chauncey, Newkirk, Lewis, Holmes, Biddle? Hear it: "IT IS NOT TRUE, that any publications have been prepared and extensively ' circulated, containing the grossest invectives against the offi" are they that say it is true ? cers of the government.' Who H. D. Gilpin, T. Sullivan, and Peter Wager. J. will, of course, decide for itself which party The public to believe. Again the same three assert, that The fact has been RECENTLY disclosed, that an unlimited discretion has been, and ' is now vested in the President of the Bank, to expend its funds payment preparing and circulating articles, and purchasing pamphlets and newspapers, calculated, by their contents, to OPERATE on Elections, and secure a renewal of its in for charter.' What is the answer to this assertion? that ANY power is "NOR IS IT TRUE, vested in the President 'for preparing and 78 circulating articles, and purchasing pamphlets and newspa- by their contents-, to operate on elections.' pers, calculated, NO SUCH POWER IS GIVEN, AND NO SUCH POWER EXERCISED." IS Here, again, the public will decide which party tells the and which not. That both do, NONE will believe. truth, The twelve gentlemen whose names in saying are given above, unite what the power given actually is. < The power,' actually given, which has been exercised, and they say, continue to be exercised, is, CALUMNIES against- the institution has been pursued.' The three Government Directors say: The Bank controls, and in some cases substantially Once more. fact that the will fcjthe defence of the Bank with which, for four years, the for ' and otcns, by its money supports some of the leading presses of the country, is NOW more clearly understood.' What is the answer to this by those twelve gentlemen ? DCT'THIS WHOLE ALLEGATION IS DENIED.' They proceed in detail thus and put the extinguisher of Truth, upon each point of Calumny, in order. They say, 'The Bank does not now control, and never did control any press whatever -the the Bank does not OWN, and never did own ANY press Bank does not SUPPORT, not did it EVER support, by its money, ANT press.' This, it must be confessed, is a stumper ! They proceed 'Created for the purpose of giving aid to every branch of industry, it has not presumed to proscribe the conductors of the press from their share of the accommodation and industry. Of the extent and security claim the exclusive privilege of Directors of these loans, the due to their capital judging.' very plain, very honest, and very just. Who that reads what these twelve honourable Directors say, doubts Now this is all a particle of it? But no matter. The source whence these charges sprung, was prepared with a channel, and a reservoir, whence again they were to be issued, by means of conduits already made The reservoir was " the Government" Mr. Taney made much use of these charges. for the purpose, all over the land. 79 I will conclude this number by showing what sort of reception the charges met at the hands of Mr. Calhoun, in his famous speech in the Senate. He says: " The the alleges that the Bank has interfered Treasury) Secretary (of with the politics of the country. If this be true, it certainly is a most heinous offence. The Bank is a great public trust, possessing, for the it purpose of discharging the trust, great power and influence, which could not pervert from the object intended, to that of influencing the po- In of the country, without being guilty of a great political crime. truth to the countenance I not intend to these do remarks, any give making litics of the charge alleged by the Secretary, nor to deny to the officers of the Bank the right which belongs to them, in common with every citizen, in their private capacity, freely to form political principles, and dtt on them without permitting them to influence their official conduct. But it is it did not occur to the Secretary, while he was accusing and punishBank on the charge of interfering in the pqjitics of the country, strange ing the Government also was a great trust, vested with powers still more extensive, and influence immeasurably greater than that of the bank, given, to enable it to discharge the object for which it was created; and that it that the has no more right to pervert-its power and influence into the means of controlling the politics of the country than the Bank itself. Can it be un- known to him that the own officer in his Fourth Auditor of the Treasury (Amos Kendall) an department, the in this transaction, was daily, man who has made and hourly meddling so prominent a figure and that he in politics, is one of the principal political managers of the administration! Can he be ignorant that the whole power of the government has been perverted into a great political machine, with a view of corrupting and controlling the country? Can he be ignorant that the avowed and open policy of the government is, to reward political friends, and punish political enemies? And that, acting on this principle, it has driven from office hundreds of honest and competent officers, for opinion's sake, only, and filled their places with devoted partizans? Can he be ignorant that the real offence of the Bank (/ WOULD NOT INTERMEDDLE ON THE is not that it has intermeddled in politics, but because it SIDE OF POWER! " The" Secretary next tells us, in the same spirit, that the Bank had been That it had spent some thirty, or forty, or wasteful of the public funds. fifty thousand dollars in circulating essays, and speeches, in defence of the institution, Well, sir, if of which sum, one-fifth part belonged to the government. the Bank has really wasted this amount of the public money, (say $12,000,) cent. But I it is must the Executive, it a grave charge. It has not a right to waste a single defence of the Bank, that, assailed as it was by say, in would have been holders and to the public, had power to defend its unfaithful to its trust both to the stock- not resorted to every proper means in its conduct, and among others, the free circulation of able and judicious publications. it . 80 " But admit that the Bank has been guilty of wasting the public money to the full extent charged by the Secretary, I would ask if he, the head of the financial Department 'of the Government, is not under as and sohigh lemn obligations to take care of the monied interest of the public, as the Bank itself? I would ask him to answer me a few simple questions: How has he performed this duty in relation to the interest which the public holds in the Bank? Has he been less wasteful than he has charged the Has he not wasted thousands where the Bank, even according to his own statement, has hundreds. Has he not, by withdrawing the deposites, and placing them in the State Banks, where the public Bank to have been? receives not a cent of interest, greatly affected the dividends of the Bank of the United States, in which the Government, as a stockholder, is loser to the amount of one-fifth of the diminution? sum which I will venture A to predict will expended " But many fold exceed the entire amount which the Bank has in its defence.* this is a small, a very small proportion of the public loss, in con- sequence of the course which the Executive" has pursued in relation to the Bank, and which has reduced the value of the shares from 130 to 108, (a Director near me says much more,) and on which the public sustains a corresponding loss on its share of the stock, amounting to seven millions of dollars, a sum more than two hundredfold greater than the waste which he has charged upon the Bank. Other Administrations may exceed this in talents, patriotism and honesty, but certainly in AUDACITY, in EFFRON- TERY, The it stands without a parallel." public now see with whom the reasons of the Secre- tary, such as they are, originated. I will in my next point -out a few more of these sparks which the Government Directors sent in the direction of the * Mr. Adams goes into detail upon this point. He says: "The people of the United States own Seventy Thousand Shares of the stock of this Bank. When the President of the United States declared war against this institution, every one of these shares was worth one hun- dred and thirty dollars. What are they worth now? At the utmost one hundred and five dollars a share. Every share of the Bank stock owned by the people of the United States, has lost twenty-five dollars of its value to thenv, by this electioneering of the President of the United States against the Bank and for himself. Twenty -five dollars a share upon seventy thousand shares and is this is the One Million Seven Hundred and Fifty Thousand Dollars, sum which the President of the United States has levied upon the people by his electioneering against the * Bank, and for himself. * * Whilst the Bank has expended forty-eight thousand dollars of the money of the stockholders, the President of the United States has taxed them to the amount of seven millions of dollars." 81 magazine of President Jackson's vengeance; and show the light in which Mr. Binney viewed both the design and the execution. ARISTIDES- nothing with which. men profess to he familiar, that is better understood by the intelligent, of all parties, and even by the well informed in countries other than our own, There than man is is the character of questions, for Andrew Jackson. a moment, No well informed that passion, and not reason, has been, I am aware, when he was supported by honourable men, who hoped otherwise. But whatever of hope may have remained on this point, his con- The time governs him. duct towards the pated it; Bank of the United States, must have dissi- there were any lurking remains of it, they disposed of for ever, by the recent ravings and or, if must be pow acts of that functionary towards Senatoj Poindexter. The power and influence of the Presidential station, governed, as all men know, by passion, were employed, and successfully, to overthrow the great financial system of our. country; and the same power and influence, governed also by passion, and a thirst for vengeance, have been put in requisition to assassi. That this memmoment prostrated, with the curses of millions upon him, with a name riven, and blasted, and damned, is no fault of Andrew Jackson, or those who cater for his passions. But is he, who handled and circulated the poison, or they who mixed it, 'the lesa excusable? Is the nate the character of Senator Poindexter! ber of the Senate is not at this physician, who, as the metaphysician, REED, illustrates, less the murderer of his patient, because the-pills, made of spiders, with a view to kill him, worked his cure? Certainly not. This plot against Senator P6indexter is but another bursting forth, in another place, of the same covert strfam, whose principal source room. It is no is Col. Benton's less calumny respecting the East it is decidedly more bold and daring, but 11 82 wicked. It however, of the same family. is, The whole of resolvable into one simple element, viz: the wrath of Andrew Jackson, kindled by those around him, against ANY it is thing and ANY body, that he is made to believe is HIS enemy. Look how its flames were tossed about, when Martin Van Buren kindled it against Mr. Calhoun. See how it consumed the first Cabinet even to Mr. Branch, who, in an unfortunate hour, had denominated Andrew Jackson "the greatest and Mark how has ravaged the financial system, in the overthrow of the Bank, consuming in its course both laws best." it and chartered rights; -with what unrelenting fury it consumed the unbending Duane, rmd how it has blazed out for the destruction of Senator Poindexter. Where, I ask, is the man, I care not how close his fellowship with Andrew Jackson, and where is the institution (the Senate and Supreme Court YET excepted) that artful, and designing, and corrupt men, could persuade him was HIS enemy, that he did not attempt utterly to destroy? Let any man name one of cither, he can. Here lies the secret of that subserviency to the if man which will is so degrading to his followers. They know his MUST be obeyed, or they must, as was Mr. Duanc, be im- molated, to appease his vengeance. As to the recent attack upon Senator Poindexter, it is even more characteristic of Andrew Jackson than the attacks upon and upon members of the Cabinets which have succeeded. I call upon the citizens of Tennessee to say, whether "the Affidavit System" was not his favorite one Let Wm. B. Lewis answer. How deeply to be dethere? is it, that Andrew Jackson CANNOT lose himself in the plored his first Cabinet, President of the United States; but that this high office should be sunk and degraded, and lost in Andrew Jackson! I take no pleasure such an exposition. the sort of man who commissioned "the GoThis, then, vernment Directors," and "devtsed them as (his) instruments," in is to examine What into did *he and report want? to him, the conduct of the Reasons, I answer, to send people, whether good or bad was of no moment, in wreaking his vengeance on this institution. Bank. among the him to justify They were 83 required, or as Mr. Binney has it, "coerced," to furnish them. I have shown the nature of the reports made tinder the have gone There remains one tke public, and which was commissions conferred, in part; and what sort of reasons Were furnished. as far as I other scintillation to expose to fire the magazine of President Jackson's alone sufficient to wrath against the Bank. It was that which exploded it or What was it? in other and his own words, "decided" him. The representation, I answer, by his chosen ones, that they were treated, whilst employed in. the business entrusted to them, and under the forms which he had prescribed, with in- dignity! That was enough* upon himself. direct assault treated It He amounted, in his view, to a so considered it, and he so it. The complaint made by the Government Directors, (after they had implicated both the Bank and its officers, as I have shown, and with what truth I have shown, also,) was, insubstance, that they were excluded from important Commit- Bank, and were, in effect, treated with contempt! Mr. Binney, in his admirable speech in the House of Re- tees of the presentatives, disposes of the claim of right set up men by these put on committees, thus: "Their right," he says, "tobe members of arty committee, has no more legal support than the right of a member of this House (the House of Reto be upon a committee appointed by this House. In this depends upon its pleasure, or upon the pleasure df the Speaker. In the Board of Directors, on the pleasure of the Board either directly or indirectly, as they may make the appointment themselves, or give the power of appointment to the President of the Board." Where is the man, or set of men, not intent on exciting presentatives) to be House it some revengeful passion of some despot, or who should not be grossly misled, that woujd ever have thought of making a grave charge against the President and Directors of a Bank for not preferring them over experienced Directors, to repre- Bank on important committees. The complaint might have come with some grace from the sent the great interests ofthe Neckers, the Gallatins and Biddies of the world (though they would have scorned to make it;) but coming from those 84 ; who made it, however well qualified they might be for the duties of their callings, or estimable in private life, the complaint is, in all eyes except their own and President Jackson's, truly ludicrous. What Government Directors thought of themselves, I reader know.* They were exalted, in their own The other Directors were even as estimation, as gods! Hear them (after an amplifigrass-hoppers in their sight. must these let the cation of their attributes:) "And yet (they say) we are told with a hardihood which nothing but the (j*pride of purse can explain, that the PUBLIC Directors, (that is themselves) ^hus devised for NATIONAL purposes; thus desig- HIGHEST NATIONAL AUTHORITY; thus invested as NATIONAL OFFICERS, with NATIONAL trusts, and RESPONSIBILI- nated by the TIES, have no The other attributes, or duties, than^the <j~other foregoing" is a true quotation, the Government' Directors. It is Directors! ! !" from "the memorial" of a marvellous illustration of the fable of the frog and the ox. But I forbear? and will leave it to Mr. Bianey to throw upon these extraordinary preten- and no less extraordinary principles and conduct, the of his powerful mind. light sions, "Heretofore," says this great man, (in the speech to which I hare referred) "in the history of the bank, the directors appointed by the President of the United States, have mingled in all the transactions of the Bank, mutually giving , and enjoying universal confidence, and being in no re^ sped U;Ao/euer.distinguished from tjie other directors. Mr. Biddle himself 1 was a director, appointed by the President, for many years, and particu- important years of 1829, '30, '31, and '32; and other gentlemen have, from time to time, acted upon all the important committees, including the committee of Exchange, so as to give the Bank the benefit larly in the for, it must always have been a question of if was not qualified for a particular post, it is and a director qualification, not probable, whatever was the source of his appointment, that he would of their peculiar qualifications, be placed "But, in sir, come upon it. government directors, a change has and upon the Bank, of a very important kind, and it is not in the lime of the present us, surprising that it has affected those directors also. "It was vehemently suspected, sir, at the time of their appointment, that their notions of duty and right were peculiar,- that they deemed them- selves bound, or entitled to use their posts for the purpose of making representations to the President of the United States, tending to dj'excite odium against their co-directors, by impeaching their motives and acts, and thus to impair the credit of Ike Bank, that they deemed themselves at 85 liberty, &c. to they were not to avow; and which pursue objects which they did not care to avow,- and finally, sir, (hat in some way, by PERMITTED some unexplained theory of their appointment, they had come to the opi- nion that they possessed political powers in the institution which they were authorised to use far political purposes. All this, sir, was vehemently the propriety of placing them suspected; and if the suspicions were just, in posts of trust and confidence in the Bank, was not so clear, particularly, as, if they were so placed, other gentlemen to sit beside it might have been difficult to them in the occupation of those persuade (Jj*! posts, might have been extremely difficult to persuade gentlemen of character, having some feelings and reputation of their own, to sit in a post of trust and confidence by the side of directors holding such- notions of duty and right, and carrying them out, without avowjng their objects, into measures of extreme personal annoyance, as well as discredit to the Bank. say, sir, it what was at that time, perhaps, no more than vehement suspicion, now, and for some time past has been, matter of (^UNQUESTIONABLE CERTAINTY; and the certainty is derived from the best possible "Sir, is the CONFESSION OF THE VERY PARTY." Mr. Binney here called the attention of the house authority to "a part of a letter addressed by three of the government directors to the President of the United States on the 22d April, 1833, which is annexed to the letter of the Secretary." They .say "Without considering any portion of our remarks as falling within the limits of those private accounts, which, as you state, the charter has so carefully guarded, since the whole relate to the antion of the Board upon matters fully open, and discussed, before them, and extend, in no instance to the private debtor and creditor accounts of individuals, yet we may be much gratification at your assurance that the information requested is for your own satisfaction^ and that yo% do not wish it to extend beyond our personal knowledge. may be permitted also excused for expressing We to add, that the wishes and opinions which we took the liberty of expressing in our former letter have been since more strongly confirmed, and that we should not only feel more satisfaction ourselves, but be enabled to convey to you more full and correct information, were we to proceed in an investigation, "WHOSE OBJECT IS AVOWED, and if we were strengthened by that official sanction which we suggested." "Then, sir," exclaimed Mr. Binney, "they were not altogether comfort- new position; and I do not wonder at it. Then, their object was not avowed, and ttrey Zj'were not PERMITTED to avow it, but were COMPELLED, by their own sense of distress, to ask for an official sanction under which they might avow it. Then, further, they were practising able in their concealment themselves avowing its object, and trying to prosecute an when that object is now known investigation, without to have been to incul- pate the Board, and particularly the gentleman at the head of it, and by means of the odium thus excited, to justify to public prejudice an act of 86 deadly hatred to the Rank, of which they were Directors the removal of the public deposites; and then, sir, I say in conclusion that there is not an honourable man in this House, or IN THIS COUNTRY, who will respond to the sentiment that they were treated at least as well as they deserved to performance of these remarkable labours. With this confession of concealment by the Government Directors, to which they were coerced by the Executive, the Secretary of the Treasury arraigns the Board for concealing its operations from them; he charges the Board with concealment, in violation of their charter, and in contempt of be, by not being assisted in the the Government, (Ej> that when the head and front of their offence is this, only they would not consent to be the dupes of concealment that was practised by others." bespeak the public attention to a continuation of Mr. Binney's remarks* with which I shall commence, and perhaps close, the next number. They are upon a most extraI ordinary part of the memorial of the Government Directors. ARISTIDES. No. 20. The reader is respectfully solicited to follow out in con- nexion with .the foregoing number, this further extract from Mr. Binney's speech: Mr. Binney, "this is not all. The memorial of the Gothis House, for the doctrines of which we are, I presume, indebted to the professional gentleman (H. D. Gilpin) whose name is at its* head, cannot be too much adverted to, in connexion with both the charge of concealment by the Board, and CC/" another charge here- "But sir," said vernment Directors to It is a document that may be after to be noticed, of a graver description. considered as a sort of small martyrology a history of the sufferings incident to disappointed efforts and mortified pretensions; and it contains, as is by which the sufferers have been where thev have placed themselves." natural, a confession of the faith tained at the stake, sus- "I beg permission," says'Mr. Binney, "to exhibit it to the House." And I beg the reader's particular attention to it. This is it: , -"It has pleased the majority of the Board of Directors, (says the memorial,) in the document to which we refer, in order, we suppose, in some degree, to extenuate their conduct, in systematically nullifying the dj'RErHESEHTATivEs of the Go VEHEMENT and the PEOPLE, (meaning themselves,) to deny that the public directors are seated at the board in any 87 other relation than themselves to deny the existence of any difference in * * the official character and duty of themselves and us. Nothing can be plainer than that the public Directors were AS INSTRUMENTS beg the 'House, (I CCj" DEVISED said Mr. Binney, to advert to 'were devised as instruments.') Nothing, felicity of the language (proceeds the memorial,) can be plainer, than that the public directors were devised as instruments for the attainment of public objects; that their the being insisted upon in the charter itself, was in obedience to the will of who elected the Legislative body by which it was passed; and that their appointment was given to the President, with the advice and consent those of the Senate of the United States, (not to the mere fiscal representative,) them with all the character of official representatives, and to OC? EXACT from them a discharge of ALL the duties, public, POLITICAL in order to clothe and cal we are mistaken in this, and morals, the practiBut WE KNOW purity and freedom of our countrymen, has misled us. patriotic, incident to a trust, so conferred. we acknowledge that our that we If solicitude about the rights, are not." * Mr. Binney proceeds: " Devised as instruments, them a discharge of ALL the dent to a plete, sir, trust so conferred! though the and given to the President, to 'exact' from duties, public, POLITICAL, and patriotic, inci- The sense would not have been more comwould have been more perfect, if they extending to ALL duties, public, political, alliteration had described their functions patriotic, and FAHTY." as One word here though I regret to make a breach in Mr. Binney's onset upon such a train of absurdities. I am only surprised with such high notions of their superior dignity, these men consented to sit at the same board with "the other directors;" or were easy to upon show seats made that this tory of the world and of the same materials. was not the its afiairs, that first men were" not only "dizzy," by a call to places of trust, &c., but argued selves into the belief that but for them, creation itself be embarrassed by fill. But to a vacuum that nothing, It time in the his- made them- would merely human,could Mr. Binney. " Now, sir," says Mr. B. "without at present saying whether theory was true, the other directors had a right to counteracting theory for themselves: and if it is true that the government directors were devised this as instruments, and that they are by their creation political directors, the other directors, who have not been so devised, are entitled to consider themselves as antipolitical directors, and not bound to assist the political operations of the other branch; but rather, by the momentum of their greater numbers, to keep them from moving the Bank out of place. . 88 . "But, the heads of the memorialists have been sir, made dizzy by their Their theory has no foundation in reason, or in the charter. I deny, says Mr. Binney, that they were devised as instruments, (^whatever they may have made of themselves. There is not a shadow of difference elevation. between the rights and duties, the powers, or the obligations of any of the directors; they are qll directors, neither more, nor same duties to all the interests confided to them. less, The and owing the directors appointed by the President, owe a duty to the nation, and so do the others, and in my poor judgment, they (the others) have performed it. The directors elected by the stockholders, owe a duty to the Bank, and so do .the directors appointed by the President, but they (the directors appointed by the President) have neither performed, nor acknowledged it. They are not placed enquiries for the President. The President has no authoenquiries to be made by them. This is a question of charter power, of power over a corporation, all of whose privileges are rights of property. The charter gives to the President no such right. It expressly there to make rity to direct gives to the Secretary of the Treasury a right of limited enquiry, &.c." Mr. Binney here shows what powers are given by the He then procharter, not by implication, but expressly. ceeds: But here is a power to be implied greater than all, and worse than all, a power to be exercised oCj" secretly, and without avowal, ex parte, without notice, without opportunity of reply or explanation being given to those whom it affects, and by persons who are holding, to all appearance, the reand pro- lations of amity with their co-Directors, setting on the same same general objects. " Sir, the Board did right not to aid them; resist them, and I inquire of the members of would have done right House, and ask them seats, fessing the it this to to follow out their honourable feelings into the reply Q^j" Would they consent to sit in Committee by the side of men who professed principles like these, AND SUBMITTED THEMSELVES TO THE WILL OF AN- OTHER, as to the Q3" manner in which they should carry them into exe- cution." The reader will need no further enlightening on the assumed nature of the rights and duties of the Government Directors. Nor will he need ever again to be told why the Senate rejected these men, when put for another term; or nomination as government directors why the Senate rejected the nomination in of one for Paymaster in the Army; and another for Gover- nor of the Michigan Territory. Whether the minds of these men be peculiarly constituted, or whether, by reason thereof, they arrive at conclusions so preposterous and unjust, as those into which they reasoned 89 themselves touching the relations they bore to "the other Directors," and the right of the President of the United States to use them as "instruments," or whether they were uncon- by other were not the sciously governed influences, the Senate saw, doubt however harmless Government with to be as invest authority, citizens, they might or to put in commission for the discharge of responsible Government trusts. The same train of reasoning would have less, that they sort of persons, money put in his of the right, to himself; troops, belonged, pay and the other that the good p'eople of Michigan were like those led one of them to believe that "all" the possession to "other Directors," entirely beneath him; or that they were and reported about, as were the acts of to be operated upon, the Bank and its officers, and to be, with their laws, judged, and condemned, and executed accordingly. Well has Mr. Binney alluded to the condition of these men to be one of their own choosing. They are "at the stake, where they have placed themselves." ARISTIDES. No. 21. Throughout the whole progress of this war of calumny against the Bank, the party prosecuting it, never, for a moment, lost sight ance, viz: of one of the principal parts of the contrivnew, and successive suspicions in the to create and send round, by its presses, not only new, and exploded calumnies. This was done by holding public mind, but old Bank up, always, as a corrupt institution, and needing to be constantly watched, and examined, either by agents, appointed by the Treasury, or by instruments,' appointed by the ' the President, or by committees, appointed by Congress. It was reasonable to suppose, that after the public treasure, which the Law had confided to the safe-keeping of the Bank, had been wrested from it by President Jackson; and its agency, which the Charter had conferred, was, by that same functionary, dispensed with, that there would be no more agents of 12 90 appointed, further to misrepresent, calumniate, and criminate the Bank. But the character of this party perse- any sort cution against the Bank, being of the same quality with that of individual persecution, it sought to justify itself, after the commission of the wrong, by some new discovery, of some sort, on which to rest some new charge of guilt, and justify the outrage that had been committed. Where is the officer of Government, upon whom the fangs of proscription have been fastened, who has not been pursued by 'the party,' and presses, with personal abuse, blacken his character? its tion, to I answer, fice. and missiles of And what to public opinion, the act that Just so with the Bank. It was every descrip- To for? justify, drove him from 'proscribed.' of- The same lawless violence that has been exerted for the destruction of hundreds, nay, thousands of individuals, had been exerted against the Bank. It had been rifled of the treasures confided by Congress and the agency which the Charter conupon it, together with its connexion with the Government the one had been dispensed with, and the other rupBut those high-handed and lawless tured and broken up. proceedings were not carried on without producing in the consciences of the actors, an occasional stir, which startled them to it ferred ; with the apprehension that the people, catching a glimpse of the enormity of the wrong and outrage which had been committed, would speak in a voice of terrible rebuke, and' drive them from their positions into that ignominy which they felt Hence, as was, and is their conduct, in purthey merited. the victims they 'proscribe,' and drive from office, so suing was, and is their conduct towards the Bank. to this hour, the lifting of the curtain that shall They dread, expose to public and the corruption of their plans and purposes towards the Bank. It was this feeling and when the country, alarmed, and view the lawlessness of their acts, embarrassed, from one extremity to the other, as it was it beheld the President of a free people, professing to when Laws of this Republic, wrestwithout law, and against law, the public treasure from the place where the laws had placed it, that prompted the act under the Constitution and ing, ' 91 party* to get up a Committee in the House of Representa- tives, and place Mr. Thomas, of Maryland, at its head. The sole object of this manoeuvre was, to keep alive suspicion against the Bank, and to feed the public mind with such ex- citing food, as the plan of operations determined upon might place within their reach. It was, in a word, a shield thrown guard Andrew Jackson and his followers from the indignation of an insulted and outraged people. The reader will bear in mind, that the Bank had been examined and reported upon, by a committee, of which Judge up by 'the party,' to Clayton was chairman, and of which committee Mr. Thomas was a member. It will also be borne in mind that Judge Clayton, after making his report, criminating both the bank and its officers, made ample atonement, on the floor of the House of Representatives, for the wrong which he had done its officers. The able counter reports of Messrs. M'Duffie and Adams, and others, will also be borne in mind, nor will it be forgotten that when Judge Clayton actually repudiated his report, it left the report of Messrs. both to the Bank and M'Duffie and Adams, to stand not on their own merits only, but supported by the testimony of Judge Clayton himself. This committee, designed as a shield to protect "the party," was formed for the avowed purpose of "ascertaining the cause of the commercial embarrassment and distress complained of by numerous citizens of the United States in sundry memo- &c. and "whether the charter of the Bank has been and what CORRUPTIONS, and ABUSES have violated existed in its management ;" and whether it has used its corrials," ; porate power, or money, to control the press, to interfere in politics, or influence elections, and whether it has had any agency, through Now here management, or money, &c. &c. its existing pressure, we have ness entrusted to this in producing the The only new feature new committee, that was it !. in the busi- not on the face of the committee, of which Judge Clayton was chairman, is that which relates to the cause of the commercial embar- rassment by ; and this was got up make the people believe, Bank was the author of it. to implication at least, that tHe 92 I sincerely wish the limits to which I feel bound to confine these essays, permitted a detailed history of the proceedings of this committee. professing to he Never intelligent in the world's history, did and honest, so weaken men, their claims The whole on public opinion, to both these characters. af- the intelligent eye, must look like some low farce. In the first place they refused the aid of a committee of the fair, to Bank, or to permit it to be present in the room while they were overhauling the books and papers of the Bank. Now I put the question to every intelligent reader, and ask, if the Board had not appointed such a committee, whether the examining committee ought not to have asked it to do so? If their object was truth, could not such gentlemen as the board named as its committee have pointed the way to it better than a set of men could find it from books and papers with which they could not be supposed to be familiar ? Or would the presence of the committee of the Bank have changed in the slightest degree, a single entry, or overshadowed a single fact? The room with the Bank committee, which they were charged, can be regarded in no other light, than as a confession of a purpose to pick, and cull, and work up such colouring matter, (as had been before prepared by men of refusal to sit in the or to conduct, in their presence, the inquiries with the same party,) as to make the Bank look to the eyes of the people just as Andrew Jackson and his followers wished it to look. Being so seen, he, and they, calculated on being sus- which they had been guilty. examining committee was to demand tained in the lawless acts of The next move of this have the Bank's books and papers sent through the streets, and all custody of the officers of the bank over them to be surrendered, to the North American Hotel I am bound to believe that when this demand was made, to ! ! ! not a single member of the committee believed it would be complied with. The object was, to make a charge against the Bank, and through the party and subsidized presses, to make the people believe that the Bank refused to have its 93 conduct examined, out of which, by implication, the sentence GUILTY was to come. of The last act of this farce was to command, through the Marshal, the personal presence of Nicholas Biddle, and the other Directors, before the examining committee, at their room, at Mrs. Yohe's North American Hotel. I never heard but one feeling among enlightened people on ceeding, and that was CONTEMPT. this whole pro- conclude this number, and this sketch of and doings of this famous committee, by saying, if any opinion can be deduced from the action of Congress on this report, it was in corroboration of that which was It may suffice to reference to the acts and expressed out of Congress, for so far as I have been able to ascertain, the report, with the recommendation with felt it closed, were (except to print it) left to expire in its. utter worthlessness. Not a muscle of it has been stirred, which own nor a breath perceived to expand its chest, since it was presented to the House. There it lies a monument of the weakness of its authors, and of the recklessness and wickedness of " the party.". I shall notice Mr. Tyler's report in my next ; and show from it that all Bank, and its calumniators, I have said in these essays in defence of the integrity, is and great public utility, and of its true. ARISTIDES. No. 22. The reader need not be reminded, that, upon the Senate of the United States has devolved the high and sacred duty of preserving what remains to us of our free institutions, and the liberty which these confer. intelligent people know Profligate party leaders, it; it and is The all true, fact is notorious. honest citizens admit denounce and call it All it. the "refractory Senate," and their instruments echo the denunciation. But in this very opposition to the Senate, and in the attempts to degrade it in the eyes of the people, in connexion has taken against Presidential usurpation, lies the proof of its devotion to liberty and the constitution, and to the "general welfare." with the glorious stand The Senate it witnessed the repeated onsets made by Jack- sonism upon the rights of the citizen, the constitution, and the laws, one of the most alarming of which was, its utter contempt of the rights of the Bank of the United States, in the war which was waged upon* it, and in the removal vindictive of the public deposites. "UNCOMIt heard the war cry: PROMISING HOSTILITY TO THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES," it saw the measures resorted to for the overthrow of that Bank, and along with it, the prostration of the best interests of the people and it was acquainted, as it to be, with the workings of the entire was in to motion, put produce all these consemachinery the Yes, from Woodbury plot, down to the Thomas quences. Committee, the Senate saw the workings of that mischievous its position enabled that and vindictive spirit, that, regardless of consequences, though should involve the very liberties of the country, had resolved on crushing (as Gen. Jackson denominated the Bank) it "the monster." It was most natural for this august body, amidst the shower of disgraceful rumours, which 'the party' had caused to fall all over the United States, implicating the integrity of the Bank, and the character of its officers, to resolve on having the whole matter put forever to rest, by an examination, to be conducted by a committee of its own. If what had been so boldly charged against the Bank be true, the Senate doubt- less reasoned, let the facts be disclosed to prove it; if false, let those who seek to for time high the truth in this matter, to be possessed of the means the world know know for reaching it. It is it. The Senate determined, therefore, to confide this important examination to its own Committee on Finance. Instructions were accordingly given to that Committee, in a resoluJune last, when it, (Mr. Tyler, of Virginia, tion of the 30th being Chairman,) immediately after the adjournment of 95 commenced Congress, the investigation with which it was charged. We all know the confusion into which the appointment of Committee threw the calumniators of this abused and There was a quailing that the dimproscribed institution. mest eye could not fail to discover; and a blanching was visible in the faces of even the most hardened Bank denouncer. Nobody doubted the honour of this Committee; none its this intelligence. Every body looked to its report with confiwho had falsely implicated the Bank, knew, those whilst dence, that now though justice had been slow to be awarded. in overtaking them, it was deeply regret that I have not the power to put this report, I feel entire, in the hands of every citizen of the Republic. I that in the analysis I propose to make of it, I shall be doing It ought to be sought after, injustice to both it and the reader. and read by every one who takes any interest in this great question, (and who, as an American, is not interested in it?) or who has been influenced by any thing that has hitherto been written, or said, in regard to the subject of it. The Thomas report contains a charge against DC/3 " the President and Board of Directors of the Bank of the United REFUSING States, for papers of the COMBINED to frustrated it. Now what to Bank" submit for inspection the books and and otherwise it implicates, FRUSTRATE the examination, and as them as having,finally, says the report of the Tyler Committee? " They deem it proper to say, that, in the examination which they have made, every facility was afforded by the officers of the institution, which the committee could have desired. No hesitation or reluctance was manifested in furnishing any book or paper which was requested, and every avenue to a full and free investigation, not only at the Bank, but at the several branches visited by the committee, or any member of it, was promptly What laid open." One the text of the Thomas report? of two conclusions must be arrived at by every reader either the Thomas report is false; or the committee so cona comment on itself as to make it obligatory on the President and Directors of the Bank, from the self-respect, or to secure ducted 96 from some heavy calamity, which that committee must have been discovered meditating, to take the ground they did. There could have been nothing personal against institution But the Thomas the one committee, or n favour of the other. that the Bank, is its own best comment. It needs not report i or any one for it, should explain why such a charge was made The report explains, against the President and Directors. and to any honest mind, justifies the course which that committee compelled the President and Directors to take. It is enough for the public to know of committee, one carrying with that when another sort just notions of right and it Bank, the whole bank, books, papers and all, were thrown open to its examination, and it is on an examination thus made, that the Tyler committee rests justice, presented itself at the its report. The "Government could see many Thomas committee, Bank which had "violated its Directors," and the acts of the charter." This, though continually harped upon and enforced, was never believed, if by these men, by those who held the key of President Jackson's purposes for if it had, even in a its charter, single instance, as was so often asserted, violated there man no is common of sense who will for a moment steps, such as are provided for in the charter, would have been instantly taken, and the work of the Bank's over- doubt that throw been made declarations "were known as sudden NOT as complete. It was because the and because they were TRUE,, be not true, that a scire facias was not sued out to simultaneously with their being made. The first examine question which the Tyler Committee propose to is: " Has the Bank violated its charter?" In the examination of this question, the several acts of the Bank, in which it was charged were minutely examined. to have violated These are embraced under the following 1. The Exchange Committee. 2. The Branch Drafts. 3. The Contract with the Barings. h'eads. its charter, 97 It will be borne in mind that the "instruments" of Presi- dent Jackson, under all their forms, including his official organ, near him, at Washington, and its subordinates all over all pressed these points upon the public; and even Mr. Secretary Taney, and the President, asserted and enforced the declaration, that the Bank had violated its char- the country But ter. have as I or rather, it 1 said, there was not a man of them believed should say, those who managed President knew that the Jackson, and kept the key of his purposes, charges were false. But they were necessary to the plan, and "the party." Hear the conclusion of the Tyler report on the question the Bank violated its charter" " Has " The language Bank is almost in substance the language United States, in reference to the two employed f Houses of Congress, which declares that a majority' (of each House) shall be necessary to constitute a quorum to do business. With as much pro- of the charter in the Constitution of the and House of Representatives had priety might it be urged that the Senate violated the Constitution by creating committees, or appointing agents to execute the laws, as that the directors, 'seven of whom are necessary for the transaction of business,' had violated their charter by the exercise of a power. The committee of Exchange was created at the same time with the committee on the offices, and other committees, has continued ever since, (it is almost coeval with the Bank itself,) and exists, as your comsimilar WITH THE mittee believes, (j>not only in STRICT CONFORMITY CHARTER, but with advantage to the Bank, and QCj* CONVENIENCE TO THE PUBLIC." The reader will lose the masterly, and demonstrative illusthe committee to this conclusion. He tration which brought will miss also the sight of that consumingfire which has burned to cinders the declarations of those effort, strove, and succeeded lieve, that this in who, with such varied making many, too many, be- committee was not only unconstitutional, but used by the Bank for corrupt purposes. If ever the agents of any plot were discomfited, and disgraced, those are, who joined the hue and cry against the Bank, on the acts of this exchange committee, The second head of examination was: THE BRANCH DRAFTS." The issuing of these drafts was denounced 13 as violating the 98 charter. Under this head the committee make an exposition that must put the subject to rest forever. They say: " The committee purposely avoid an elaborate argument on either side. They content themselves with stating the general principles on which their several opinions are founded, and submitting them to the Senate and the country. Those who maintain the legality of these issues are sustained by high, legal opinion, (Mr. Binney, Mr. Webster, and Mr. Wirt) and in a great degree by the fact, that for years past, the government has taken those drafts; uniformly, as money, in the payment of its dues; thus virtually acquitting the Bank from all liability to forfeiture, and giving the drafts themselves the impress of a legal currency. Nor do they perceive that the country has, by the proceeding on the part of the government, sustained any loss. These drafts are, every where, current, are redeemed by the Bank with promptitude and readiness, and answer commerce all the pur- to poses of an unquestionable legal currency." Here again I regret, that it is not practicable for me to give branch of the committee's to the reader, the exposition of this detail. I urge it upon those who seek a full enthis on lightening subject, to get, and read the report, and the documents on which it rests. enquiry in The third branch of enquiry under the charge of u the Bank has violated its charter," is, "the contract with the Barings." I defer this to my next, and painful as it will be, have to send round a palpable falsehood, which the committee pin, (and which it doubtless gave them great pain to do,) on President Jackson himself I will not say falsehood, I shall for when he came across the declaration, which was written assume that he believed it was true. But then, as he had "his foot on the neck of the monster," why did he not slay it at once by a scire facias. It in his address to his cabinet, I will Who was, as I shall show, nevertheless, false. palmed this it concerns him, not me, to know. falsehood on the President, ARISTIDES. No. 23. I have said the Committee of the United States Senate have, in their report, under that decision of it, headed "The contract with the Barings," pinned a falsehood on President 99 The Committee What is it? Jackson's address to his cabinet. direct allegation against the Bank." call it Here "a it is: "The agent (Gen. Cadwallader) made an arrangement (with the Barings, in relation to the 3 per cents) on terms, in part, which were iu DIRECT VIOLATION OF THE CHARTER; and when some inci- dents connected with this SECRET negotiation (^ACCIDENTALLY came to the knowledge of the Public, and the Government, then, and not before, so much as was palpably in violation of the Charter, was disavowed." must remark, that the writer of this, (I take for granted it was not Gen. Jackson,) I care not who he was, KNEW that what he asserted, as to the violation of the Charter, was not true; and the conclusion is forced upon me, that if Gen. Jackson believed it was true, there were those Now, here again I who knew it was not, having him from sueing out prevent end, at once, to the Bank. sufficient control over him, to a scire facias, and putting Does it an not constantly occur to Bank had violated Charter, as President Jackson, and Mr. Taney, and the Government Directors, and the Globe, and all the affiliated every reasonable mind, that, if the really its it had, that, if they believed what they said, they would not have struck it out of existence by Would men carry on a strife, such as they a scire facias? presses constantly asserted conducted expose themselves to the effects of a warfare so protracted, and finally to the heavy judgments of an insulted people, for usurping a power for the Bank's overthrow, a simple legal process, provided for in the Charter, the destruction of the object of their hate and vengeance, could have been made complete? I answer No; and I shall when, by be responded to by all men, of all parties, who have sense enough comprehend the clearness of the proposition, and honesty enough to speak what they think. But hear the to Committee on this grave charge: "The charge thus made," (says the Committee,) implicates most strongly the character of the Directors of the Bank not only as unworthy, but DISHONEST agents." It is no more or less than a charge, that if the negotiation could have been kept a profound secret, they would have sanctioned it in all its parts; but that they were driven from this purpose by the fact, "that some incidents connected with this secret negociation accidentally and that in came to the knowledge of the public and the government," order to save themselves from public odium, and the Bank 100 from the effects of this violation of its Charter, they dishonoured, so far the agent (Gen. Cadwallader) whom they had employed, by disavowing his act. "If this charge" (proceed the Committee) "be well founded, the Committee have no hesitation in saying, that the as they could do so, Bank is not only responsible for the conduct of the Exchange Committee, Committee having acted in the matter under a resolution of the Board, investing them with full authority, but that the Directors connected that with the transaction have proved themselves unworthy of their places." From this opinion of the committee the reader may infer how rank and deadly was the poison that was thus attempted to he infused DCPby President Jackson himself, into fiscal agent of the characters of honourable men, and into the the country! again, I feel how important it is for the reader to the details of this case. They are no less satisfactory Here know than abundant and well attested. I must beg to employ so much of them, as will settle the question of the truth or falsehood of the direct allegation made against the bank by the President of the United States to his cabinet, as above quoted. "Two of the members of the Exchange Committee," says the report, "men of acknowledged probity and honour, were examined on oath before a Committee of the House of Representatives, in February, 1833, and in reply to the following questions; 'Had the President of the Exchange Committee any intention to disavow Gen. Cad wallader's authority to make the contract he did, until after the appearance in the New York papers of the llth or 12th of October last, of the circular of the Baring's to the foreign stockholders of the United States three per cent, stocks, announcing to them that they had the authority of the bank to purchase or nego" Answer of Mr. tiate a postponement of the stocks held by them?' Eyre "I can say YES, POSITIVELY. I recollect it perfectly well. When I read this letter of Gen. Cadwallader (of 22d August) I said it was not first proper, and disavowed Answer of Mr. it." Bevan "I never did see, myself, the notice referred to in the New York was received giving inpapers, but well recollect the moment the letter The Presiformation of the proceedings in relation to that negociation. dent of the Bank, with the approbation of the Exchange Commitfee, imof that arrangement mediately wrote, disavowing the nature been made under a misapprehension." These, say the Committee, are the facts, which satisfactory history of the case, transaction. this which on to insert) attend most it having then, (including a I have not room If reference be had to the letters of instructions, continues the report, under 101 which the agent acted, those instructions look to an arrangement for the postponement of the period of redemption of = the stocks, and OC/ not a word is said about a purchase. "If, says the Committee, Mr. Eyre and Mr. Bevan are to be believed, when testifying on oath before a Committee of Congress, then, connected with is there no reason to believe that "incidents this secret negotiation, accidently coming to the knowledge of the public and the government, induced the Bank to disavow the act of its agent in opposition to its own views and previous intentions." And if here let the reader pause and ask himself, especially he be of the number of those who have been led astray by such glaring and mischievous falsehoods, what it is he owes to the men who have thus misled him, and to himself? If after a just analysis of this matter, lous slanderers who make he can feel for those libel- their business, as is proved they and thrust at the reputation of honourable citizens, andpour on their "good name" one constant stream of malignant slander, and to level to the ground by such have done, it to cut means, one of the most useful public monied institutions that has ever existed; I say, if after this, he can entertain for them any other feeling than contempt and loathing, he must have a medium through which to contemplate such acts, other than which high-minded men are accustomed to look. The duty every man owes to himself under such cirHe cannot do else than resume cumstances, is no less plain. that through the ground he may have occupied before he was seduced from by such reckless and wicked instruments, without sharing in the infamy of their doings. it There is in such an exposure, cause of deep grief. Blushes must suffuse the cheeks of every American citizen, at home and abroad, when he sees the chief magistrate of his country lending himself to his own 'instruments/ to be used by them for the destruction of what is more dear to men than their 'good names, '^nd for the prostration of a of the wisest counsels, and of the the creation agent, most patriotic hearts. But shall these doings not be exposed? lives viz: their fiscal Shall men be permitted to intrench themselves behind the 102 bulwarks of such malicious slanders as these? pull to pieces, without cause, all that is good around them, and leave the garden of our liberty a wild} and that, which, through the 1 toils and blood of the revolution, was made a fit and glorious residence for the free, not only of the present, but future geInstead of that harmony that should nerations, a desert? characterize the citizens of the republic, a discord more fell than any that has ever disgraced the most corrupt governments of the old world, has been introduced by Jacksonism, exhibiting as one of its first fruits, a scramble for office and a lust of place, that gives to its prescriptive character, all the ferocity This is the secret of that belongs to the beasts of the forest. that professed regard 'for the people,' which under cover of Jackson in the front keep the power and that false pretence, has placed Andrew rank of his followers, to defend, and places they hold; and to trample down any thing, and every thing that is suspected, even, of controlling, or regulating their outrageous proceedings, and to secure a succession. Painful as the task is which I have imposed on myself, and lead to what consequences it may, I shall go through with it. grieves me to say, I have yet other demonstrations to give of the vindictive character, and disreputable acts of those who It have rallied under the standard bearing the motto "UNCOMPROMISING HOSTILITY TO THE BANK OF THE UNITED STATES." ARISTIDES. No. 24. 4 These,' say the Committee, 'are ALL the charges against the Bank, tending to implicate it in a violation of its charter, into which the Committee deemed it necessary to enter.' The intelligent reader will understand the committee as exa whole mass of cluding insignificant implications made on this head, by the government directors, and the Thomas Committee, and by the President of the United States, and his hosts of retainers and followers. All but the ignorant, and those 103 who knew better, but chose- to employ this charge against the Bank, knowing it to be false, I mean the enlightened portion of the community, knew, while these 'instruments' were employed in this branch of the war, that there was no foun- support their assertions but they were relied upon as a part of ' the party' scheme to delude the dation in truth, to people. We to do illustration of the readiness of have had a remarkable Gen. Jackson's 'instruments' what he commands : in two most remarkable First, in cases, the readiness with which the government directors undertook the business entrusted to them, MODE and all ; and second, in the readiness of another set of instruments to back him He commanded, ter. as if in his war upon Gov. Poindex- by magic, the ready assent and labours of each, having the same object in view, viz : the He procured mutilated and false utter destruction of both. reports from the one, (as I have proven in these essays,) and OATHS from the other, and he made the same use of both: and And yet, both have turned out to be as false as vindictive. with proof piled upon proof, and demonstration upon demonstration, there are found men who continue to harp upon the worn-out charge that 'the Bank has violated its charter.' I would commend to all such, a daily use of the " That to prayer gie us, see ourselves as others see us." gift To The tee, is, next point of inquiry, in order, by the Tyler Commitinto the charge made by President Jackson, and in- stantly backed by his retainers, that the public deposites were not safe in the keeping of the Bank. I have adverted to this charge in a previous number, and would pass it over here, were it not that I desire to introduce a few figures, for the At the very moment when confirmation of the wavering. this charge was made that the liabilities and that to to resound through the land, it is proven Bank amounted to $60,059,909 85 of the ; meet them the Bank had resources amounting $67,931,511 36, or a surplus of $7,871,601 51. It is to further shown by the Committee, that after deducting all losses, real and probable, the Bank had, on the 1st November last, an actual surplus of Four Millions, Eight Thousand, Five dred and twenty Dollars and sixty-six cents. Well does the Committee remark, after making this Hunexhi- bit, that they 'might well take leave of this branch of the but as there are facts of high import bearing on this subject' the Committee give them. I will glance at them question, first premising, that when this branch of the machinery for the destruction of the Bank was put in motion, not doubting its results, the President, in anticipation, came presently to the conclusion, that he had so effectually institution, as to justify the assertion, that the a place of safe-keeping lays a train to man who weakened the Bank 'was not for the public deposites. Like the a house, and runs away, saying that the house, doubtless, is burned down; or, like he who gives the stab to a man, or administers poison to him, goes off, and asserts that 'there can be no doubt he is dead 7 just so fire with President Jackson, after he and his .'instruments' had set in motion the following plan for the Bank's overthrow. "It began to committee work 'From the in 1832. fall of that year/ the Bank has been put to the severest trial.' The Secretary of the Treasury led the van of the attack, and in his report of the 5th day of December, 1832, questioned say, 'the Bank! Congress was informed that an agent was appointed to inquire into the security of the Bank; an examination into its concerns was suggested; the the responsibility of the Bank in regard to the three per cents was reCommittee of the House of Representatives. Out conduct of the ferred to a Bank with having made monster of an assertion of this report, (after charging the deceptive reports,) 'It was born this hence appears that the Bank seven and a half when, it is is millions, than admitted on all worse condition, by was in March, 1832, have been under pres- in a it hands, to sure.' Who gave birth to this monstrous design? The minority committee, who, says the Tyler report, "were regarded at the time as holding sentiments somewhat congenial with those of the Executive department." yes and if angels from Heaven had denied the truth of the statement and its in- 105 ference, and brought down wrth them truth, lighted rays from the source of truth, they would have been party,' denounced as devils, and their up with by 'the light, absolute dark- ness. This minority committee felt awkward in making such an assertion; hence they must, further to gull the people, and furnish material for their presses, and party, explain the rea- son why, under such a state of things, there was so little The reason was given and what does the pressure felt. "the Bank has so arranged its afreader think it was? why, evade making payments which were required by the government." But this was not enough: these blows were not considered to be hard enough. Another was given by the same committee: "the condition of the bank is no more favourable than fairs, as to most perilous moment of its existence." But this was Then comes another and here wa have a world of doubt, whether the Bank can be any longer trusted. "There is not time left, says the Jackson committee's report, in the not enough. for the further action of Congress, with a fect information at the present session. view to a more per- JO^Whether exist- THE ing facts, (such as the above) are sufficient to justify in taking any step against the Bank, author- EXECUTIVE by the Charter, is a matter for the decision of the proper officers, acting upon their own views, and responsibility. An opinion by Congress, can make it neither more, nor less, its ised duty to act." This suggestion contains the germ of that notable affair, which resulted in the removal of the deposits. Even this committee looked only to an action by "the proper officers" of course none could be meant other than such as the laws had designated. But when the act was consummated by an improper officer, viz: President Jackson, over the head of 'the proper officer,' and with his feet upon his neck, for he prostrated Mr. Duane, to get at the Bank, with this final blow, these same men, followed by the army of office holders, and expectants, harked on by the presses in pay of the 14 106 former, shouted "well done it's all right, down with the bank." But President Jackson was not content with the blows that preceded his last and final blow so it was secretly continued anterior to that last blow, to make a concerted run upon one of the Branches that at Lexington, being supposed to be the easiest of conquest, was selected; all these brought the President to the conclusion, that the Bank was ruined, and hence he asserted the deposites were not safe. But before they were withdrawn, that assertion, as I have in a previous number stated, was contradicted, and the same lips pronounced the Bank to be too strong ! . ! ! The Tyler committee question, in view of all this, "whe- ther any other monied corporation in the world, could have stood up against trials so severe." And for what, I ask, was all this falsehood, and shuffling, and violation of law resorted to? Wherefore should men thus combine, and plan a conspiracy against such an institution as the Bank of the United States has proved itself to be? In revenge, I fearlessly answer, for its refusal to throw itself arms of Jacksonism, to be used by it as a political tool in the support of his measures, 'right or wrong,' and in the ulterior hope that was relied on, that "the party" might into the employ its means Here freely, in the election of Andrew Jackson's Mr. Duane says that the Administrative department was actuated, in all its measures And against the Bank, by a spirit of VINDICTIVENESS. successor. who doubts it? is the secret. Who noramus, that does not is there, in fact, know this to who is not an ig- be true? These measures of vindictive hostility having been consummated by the final blow of President Jackson, given on his own responsibility, and for which in any other country, and among any other people, he would have been made suit" ably to atone, and the work of pilfering," as Mr. Calhoun has it, and of destruction being done, this same party, knowing that great distress would grow out of this rash and lawless course, tacked about, and occupied one of the strangest and most contemptible positions, that ever disgraced any party, in 107 From this position, they deand with main, might body and soul, through their and its office-holders, and expectants, that there press, through was "PRESSURE;" and in the same breath deor in any other country. this, nied, (pANY clared, "THE BANK CREATES THE PRESSURE." high minded and honourable men of, I care not if ever such a position was occupied by I appeal to what party, and ask men pretending to be honest, before? leaders shouted "there And yet, when the no pressure," it is panic; so shouted their army of subsidized followers; and when they shouted again "The followers. mingled is Bank creates the pressure," so shouted these same The very echoes of this contradictory shouting ! What was this position taken for? I will answer. Those who had committed the rash act, knew there would be pressure; and they knew there was pressure; but it answered their ends to deny When it. proof upon proof, when twelve men from thousand of as honourable the city of Philadelphia, as ever graced a city, told the President to his face, there was pressure; and when the cry arose from all parts of the country, and was made to resound in the Halls of Congress, and over the land, then, answered the king on his throne, and then shouted his followers, "The Bank makes it," "Go to Nick Biddle." It mortifies revolting, and ment one to show to see to a set of men men human nature under an aspect so do every day professing attachthat has so trifled with their confidence, as I and degraded them. Men may think of this business as they please, but let them take my word for it, there is no coming in contact with such doings, and giving them support, without contracting some of their bad odour; and participating in ARISTIDES. their disgrace. No. 25. Yes " Go to . Nick Biddle," was the insulting re- ference of President Jackson, to the free citizens of 'this 108 Republic, who, goaded by the pressure inflicted on them by own hand, sought, from that same hand, the relief of which they stood so much in need. Thousands upon thou- his sands, as the world knows, through the mediums of petitions and committees, endeavoured by appeals to his head and his heart, to quench the fire of his wrath against the Bank, and thus save the country from the devastating evils which threatened The it. plan had been laid. These evils were foreseen by the prompters; and when the time should arriye when they would be felt, it was arranged for the President and his back*ers, boldly and impudently to charge them to the President's Bank. " Go to Hence the courteous and gentlemanlike Nick Biddle." reference, the strangest of all the strange events of these strange times, that a people professing to be intelligent, and to have some discretion and will of their own, should have It is among permitted the charge, that the live a single hour. They all Bank knew caused the pressure, to that there was nothing but mutual confidence and prosperity, that the whole country was flourishing from one extreme to the other, before that confidence was prostrated, and that prosperity blighted, by the measures of the President preceding and accompanying the act of removing the deposits and it is no less universally began and advanced with these meawas consummated by the last and final blow which took from the bank nine millions of its means; and known, sures, that a pressure and that it which, of course, carried with it the proclamation, that as many millions would be required by the Bank, of its debtors, to supply the place of those removed. No sensible man could arrive at any other conclusion of course, all who were caof on the pable reasoning subject, came to that conclusion. The was weaken and destroy that confidence between men, without which fiscal operations cannot be suseffect of this to tained; and to lead every man who might be proximately, or remotely, indebted to the Bank, to act in reference to a de- mand upon him. The cabal who surrounded the President, therefore, pro- 109 vided him with a shield, to ward from himself and it, the ex- cited and apprehended vengeance of an injured aud deeply He was told to say to the people, that the people. wronged sufferings they endured were caused by the Bank. so tell them, and then to make good his own He did belief in the truth of the charge, he told them to " Go to Nick Biddle," called the Bank Monster," and then left his press at Washington, and its affiliated tribe, and his 100,000 office- "A make the people believe that own measures were produced by the effects produced holders, to his by of the Bank! The Tyler Committee look into this charge, under the head " What has been the conduct of the Bank since 1832, in regard to the extension and curtailment of its loans and disIt is impossible for me to give in detail this matcounts?" Never were ter of fact division of the Committee's labours. so conclusively proved to be acts of were those of the Bank, in placing itself in an attitude to meet this new position which the Executive of the United States had taken against it; nor were ever any proofs more conclusive of the studious purposes of any insti- acts of any institution self-preservation, as tution to avoid manded The taking a single step beyond what was de- on the principle of SELF-PRESERVATION". reader will bear in mind that the Executive and PARTY of it hostility to the Bank, were not confined to a removal of the Nine Millions and upwards, public deposites, amounting but that it contemplated the annihilation of the Bank. Schemes were concerted, and plans laid, to make runs upon its branches; and every measure was adopted that could be made to weaken to claims to public confidence, at home and abroad. Who, I but a reckless or a ask, politician, maniac, would expect it of the Bank to continue its business, under such circumstances, its or remain idle, and adopt no measures for its preservation? What was the first step of the Bank, in front of such an enemy as this? On the 13th August, 1833, First, That the discounts of the it decided: Bank and the Officers should not be increased. Second, That domestic days to run. bills purchased, should have but 90 110 Third, That the five Western officers should purchase only, on the Atlantic cities, except when ninety days taken in payment of debt, when they might be taken at any These orders were issued on the 12th place at four months. bills October, 1833. To the five Western branches the President of the Bank " It wrote thus. is a subject of regret to be obliged to im- on your business, especially on your opepose any rations in exchange, to which we attach particular value. The measure will, however, I trust, be only temporary, and will restraint not be continued when the circumstances expedient have passed." To which render it it was said the other officers " These resolutions make, as you perceive, but little your present arrangements of business, and whatever change restrictions they contain, will, I trust, be temporary, and only: in cease with the causes which have rendered them expedient at present." Could any mode have been adopted tender, or more sees in this any lenient to in such a the dealers of the thing else than a purpose crisis, Bank? to place the more Who Bank marauding array of mercenaries in its front, who, pirate-like, had hoisted the bloody flag? or any thing beyond a cautious regard for the welfare of those who were its debtors? As the Executive continued to press on the Bank, the Bank in a state of safety, against the continued to guard itself but only then. This is proven by the action of the Bank having, in the first division of its movements, called in, of the Nine Millions Eight Hundred President JackSixty-eight Thousand and odd Dollars, that son had ordered to be removed from the Bank, only $5,825,906 74. At another period, g3, 320,000 were called in. This was under directions from the President of the Bank, in these words: and the new measures of present situation of the Bank, to be in contemplation, make it expedient to place the institution beyond the reach of all danger; for this purpose I am directed to instruct office to conduct its business on the foot- The hostility which are understood your ing, &c," The total amount curtailed between October, 1833, and Ill of seven January, 1834, was $9,145,905 74, being upwards had Jackson than President less dollars hundred thousand orthe the Bank. from Meanwhile, ordered to be removed ders for reduction were from time to time relaxed, where they bore heavily on the community. secure position, on the 27th June, take into con1834, a committee of seven was appointed to sideration the present state of the Bank, and to inquire whether any further measures be necessary, in consequence of the Having placed itself in a without taking any steps expected adjournment of Congress, resolution on the subject of the removal of the deposites. was adopted, revoking all orders for the reduction of loans, A and authorising the bills, on where the it officers to might commuuity. expand their loans, be necessary to relieve and purchase any pressure This gave rise to a new chime among the assailants. If the Bank, in its own defence, forced by executive acts, and executive threats of vengeance, took a position of security, it was Having gained that charged with causing the pressure. of the and for the condition people, and Confeeling point, when gress not doing any thing, it gave relief where it could, of and was started the whole the exactly an cry pack, up opposite sort! Was there ever such a profligate set of men? furnish any thing like a parallel to their acts? Does history And yet by impudence and patronage, they succeeded in imposing upon a deluded people, and inducing them, even at the cost of their own degradation, and ultimate sufferings, to sustain all this conduct, together with the President's lawless acts, and their contempt for the petitions of those who sought to have what he himself had made wrong, put right. I shall glance rapidly, in my next, over the remaining points his utter of enquiry by the Tyler committee; and afterwards give a picture of the relations in which Gov. Wolf, and Geo. M. Dallas, men and others of 'the party,' stand will, for the sake of office, "instruments" of themselves, and deluding the people, a duty to this subject. or the hope of arises, office, in that capacity, If make succeed in and should be recognized 112 and respected by some one, to expose their conduct. duty I have assumed. That ARISTIDES. No. 26. With the next question, in order, proposed and examined " What has been the the Tyler committee, viz: by management of the Bank?" I have but little to do. It is true, " the party" assailed eyes, by upon own itself ridiculous in all intelligent which was known to be inevery blow struck the assailants a point and especially vulnerable in their and made it its efforts as The "management" faces. of the Bank, whe- ther for good or for evil, could affect only three partiesFirst The Government. Second Third I The public, generally. Itself. have shown vernment. I in a previous number, how it affected the Goto repeat the testimony here. It is true, beg from the same quarter, it will be deemed good by " the party," only whilst it served " the party;" but when it stands opposed to "the party," it will, Honest men will not in their eyes, be no testimony at all. Here it is. Mr. Rush, fail, however, to give it due weight. like all other testimony 1-828, then Secretary of the Treaas of the Bank, agent of the Treasury for paying sury, says " In this off the public debt manner, heavy payments of the on the 13th of December, debt are, in effect, being thrown at made gradually, instead of the whole mass once upon the money market, which might and in other produce injurious shocks. So prudently in this^ of the the Bank aid in does operation paying off the respects, debt, that the is community hardly has a consciousness that it going on." It is true, this just tribute vailed known was paid before Jacksonism pre- be considered, especially since Mr. Rush is to occupy other ground now, as the testimony of an- and may other administration as a mere Adams trick a sort of trap 113 to catch Ingham Bank gudgeons. He was says. Well, then, Jackson, up let us see what Mr. He swam in to the hub. found no resting place until a bough from the hickory tree was protruded for him to repose upon. Being there, hear him. He writes in July, 1829, thus: Jacksonism his feet " I take the occasion to express the great satisfaction of the Treasury Department, at the manner in which the President (that same 'Nick Biddie') and Directors of the parent Bank have discharged their trusts, in 03" ALL their immediate relations to the Government. So far as their transactions have come under my notice, and especially in the facilities afforded in transferring the funds of .the Government, and in the prepara- tion for the heavy payment of the public debt on the first inst., which has management of your board, at a time of severe been effected by the prudent depression on all the productive employments of the country , without causing any sensible addition to the pressure, or even visible effect upon the ordir nary operations of the State Banks." An honest man would think this was a faithful Bank, and But it had not yet been felt by " the a very useful Bank. on the question of becoming its tool. Next comes the party" of President Jackson himself. This, we all know, testimony now, it is esteemed to be good, or applicable, only so long as and the plans of his party. He is suit his purposes, may man him to-morrow; advocates a one time, and condemns it at another. He came into power for one term, and so announced it, as did his beloved friend and co-worker, Amos Kendall: then he goes for for a measure two. to-day, and against at He is shocked officers interfering of his at the bare suspicion of the with State elections, and army of office-holders to bring all upon them, and actually comes out Federal now requires it their influence to bear at last under his own hand, to hector and bully those who may dare to stand in the way of the election of his chosen successor. I know very well the testimony of such a witness in behalf of the Bank, may well be considered as worthless but hear him in 1829 hear him: " It banks was apprehended that the withdrawal of so large a sum from the which it was deposited, at a time of universal pressure in the in money market, might cause much bank accommodations. But to the interests dependent on was wholly averted by an early anti- injury this evil 15 114 cipation of it, at the the officers of the I leave it Treasury, Qj' aided by of the United States." tfie judicious arrangement of Bank for the report of the Tyler committee solve to there be any) touching the " management of the Bank," under the two remaining heads, viz: towards the the doubts (if public and itself. "The summary of all which is," says the committe, "that the Bank, in the last eleven years, has overcome all difficulties which stood in its way, has given to its notes a universal circulation, redeemable wheresoever presented; has increased the circulation from four to twenty millions, has purified the general currency, and has doubled the profits of the fj Bank itself." There need not be another word added to this testimony. was " the party" sought to secure the " Bank as one of its instruments." The Bank nobly spurned the attempt upon its honour. Then devices were formed to It after this that destroy it; and then were causes hunted after to justify the crusade which it was resolved to set on foot for its overthrow. The postponement of the period for the redemption of the three per cents, was seized upon, as was the expansion of its operations in 1831; and then in order, all the rest that I have named, including the notable duties assigned to Messrs. Gilpin, Sullivan, and Wager; and those other duties undertaken by the Thomas committee, &c. Among the charges against the Bank, was that of establishing its branches in the States. At this point a hue and cry was raised. The hair of every " instrument" was made to bristle with fear, and every such tongue was loud in its anathemas against the Bank, " rights of the States." for thus daring to interfere The with the land resounded with the cry, ? "the Bank is extending its influence stop it stop it.' the into this business, and look Well, Tyler committee what do they find? Why, reader, that the leaders of this very cry were the petitioners to have branches sent among the States, and into the territories named by them. They find the Bank was not " intrusive," and very conclusively say, " It is difficult to conceive how it could in any way enlarge the 115 sphere of its influence by locating a branch where neither the wants of commercial men, or of any other class, required increased banking facilities. The want of borrowers would seem to be as fatal to the spread of its influence, as the want of money Every body knew to assail the But the who it to lend." this; Bank on this and even "the party" ground, knew foul purpose is disclosed who chose it. by the proof that those thus waylay the Bank, were the very men who invited come among them! to Eight original branches have been established within the NASHVILLE, Natchez, St. Louis, Mobile, Portland, Burlington, Utica, and Buffalo. last sixteen years, viz: at The people of Nashville began so long ago as 1817, to earbranch. First, by a petition signed by FELIX nestly solicit a GRUNDY, and others. -Grundy was very importunate he wrote often and. pressingly meetings of the citizens were a committee was appointed to urge upon the Bank called to send them a branch. There were " only six persons who refused to sign" the petition for a branch. George W. Campbell urged it; so did John SON! The Bank and at last sent Bell, late Speaker of the House of 3 Representatives; and so, reader, did QCJ ANDREW JACK- declined, notwithstanding, for several years, a branch, but not until the Legislature them virtually asked for it. The Natchez branch was sent on invitation of the Legisla- ture. That upon the application, of the citizens of that town, aided by a letter from Mr. RUSH, in reply, say the committee, to a letter from Mr. BENTON, (not Jesse, but Thomas, the Senator,) and transmitted by Mr. BENTON at St. Louis, to the President of the Bank. The branch at Natchez was twice urged upon the Bank by Mr. RUSH, who also urged the establishment of another at Detroit; but the Bank, believing Buffalo to be a better place, and seconded in this by C. C. CAMBRELENG, who took a thousand dollars fee for looking into the superior fitness of Buffalo over Detroit, and reporting upon it. 116 The Mobile and Portland branches were also called for, says the committee, by letters from the Treasury Department. Of the eight branches established within sixteen years, says the committee, only two, those at Burlington and Utica, were by the Bank. established " if the But, as the committee very conclusively remark, Bank had sought, by multiplying its offices, to exert a controlling influence over public sentiment, it would have been furnished a fair apology in the numerous applications addressed to it from every quarter, to have multiplied them almost ad infinitum. Those applications have been sustained by men of the most exalted character." Among the names applying for a branch at Lynchburg, (Va.) Mr. Jefferson's is one. Among those for a branch at Fredericksburg, (Va.) are Judge P. P. Barbour, Mr. Madison, James Barbour, Hugh Nelson, and James Pleasants. Among the -names applying SON'S. Among 3 ANDREW JACK- found OCf those asking for a branch for a branch at Pensacola, is at Albany, is same personage who fills the office of Vice President of the United States, and has been chosen by President Jackson as his successor; and who " Uncomhas, for wily, and fox-like reasons, proclaimed to the the United States" Bank of promising hostility Many reasons operate to make me wish that Mr. Rush ocI contemplate cupied the ground now, he occupied in 1828. his present position, and his relation to his new associates, (0" MARTIN VAN BUREN'S, the with pain! He was never monize with the born to occupy the one, or to har- other. I will not follow up the rejections by the Bank, of applications for branches, but will merely add, that sixty-three ap- plications " were rejected, though, as the pressed upon by the memorials and Tyler committee say, petitions of most re- spectable citizens of the several places from whence the ap- plications proceeded." then, let the candid reader ask himself, what sort of judgment an insulted people ought to award those political Now, instruments? Can they be regarded as entitled Are such men, in party political matters, to be to confidence? trusted? And 117 that has been things, should not an institution in find crushed by the weight of calumny alone, every honest above all heart, a friend? I meant only to make a summary of what remained of the committee's report, but found I could not do the reader justice by any such analysis. I shall come to a close soon. I am in quest of nothing but truth; nor do I seek for any thing bemay enable yond such an enlightening of public opinion, as it to exercise itself upon a great question, according to truth and justice. ARISTIDES. No. 27. Who is there that has not heard the denunciations of "the party" against the Bank on account of the course it has pursued in relation to the French Bill? Over what part of this Union has any man travelled, without coming in contact with President Jackson's delectable organ, the Globe, and its serpouring forth their poisonous streams of abuse vile copyists, and detraction, and diffusing their tainted matter every where, hope (alas that hope has been too fatally realized) of innoculating people with that VENGEANCE against the Bank which their employers had wreaked upon it? The French in the Bill ! was? ! Does the reader know what sort of transaction this Has he informed himself? If he have, then if he be ho- he can feel nothing but loathing for a set of men who would implicate the Bank for its action on the case. For the information of such as may not have had access to nest, the documents, I will copy the summary made by the Tyler Committee of the history of the Bill. The Committee say: " The The Government has state of the case is as follows. simple a Bill of Exchange on Paris for sale. In consequence of the magnitude of the sum, it would, in order to meet with a purchaser in the person of a private individual, have had to be divided into several sums. This would have been attended with delay, which the Government sought to avoid, and probably with loss, by effecting a reduction in the price of Exchange. The offer of the bill, under these circumstances, is made to the Bank, and the Bill PURCHASED by the Bank. It is duly presented, and protested and the purchaser demands the USUAL damages arising is for non-payment, under the protest. The Attorney General, (Taney) expresses the opinion that the purchaser has no title to damages, and says he will give his reaHe is asked the reasons for his opinion, at another sons at another time. time, by the party most interested in knowing them, and he declines giving them! The Bank urges the claim upon the Treasury, which is ultimately decided against it; and having no recourse against the Government by suit, retains an amount, arising out of the dividends of the Government, one of the stockholders, equal to the damages. The President of the Bank addresses a letter to the Secretary of the Treasury, advising him of and stating the object to be to carry the question before the Courts, and expressing his readiness to adopt any other course of proceeding upon the subject which would be more agreeable to the Government, which is this, altogether declined by the Government. "are the FACTS in the case." These," say the Committee, I will not occupy the reader's time by giving the reasons of the Committee justifying the Bank in the course it adopted. None hut a man devoid of common sense would require rea- sons to satisfy him upon a case so self-evident ; and none go- verned by a feeling of common honesty would deny to the Bank the right to the damages claimed by it. But some who have common sense and pommon honesty, may, possibly, doubt the right of the Bank to retain the damages. The Committee may enlighten such : " The doctrine of retainer," says the Committee, "well understood by the Courts, applies as well to a corporation as to an individual; and when that retainer is avowedly made in order to procure a submission to the Courts and Juries of the country, and would have been waived, as is plainly intimated in Mr. Biddle's letter to Mr. Woodbury, if the submission could any other way be secured, your Committee are unable to see why there should be either clamor or objection raised to the course pursued by the " directors. in Let this suffice. There is one other reference, by the Committee, to this case, which I cannot omit introducing. It ought to cover with shame those conspirators against the Bank, and awaken in every honest bosom a feeling of contempt for them. I commend to the reader's attention the following quotations from the same report " The Government has often purchased Bills : of Exchange on fo- reign countries, and the Committee i ignorant of a single case of protest in which it has ever remitted the damages!" 119 The Committee then cite the case of Stephen Girard, one of the largest stockholders of this very Bank. ment bought a bill of him. It was protested. Mr. Girard remonstrated. demanded. was inflexible. The damages were of which this same Girard is a large turn, a bill paid. The GovernDamages were The Government The same Bank, stockholder, buys, in its of the Government. are charged when, Government refuses lo lo! It is protested. Damages in the plenitude of its justice, the The reasons are asked pay them Mr. Taney, General Jackson's tool for re- for this refusal. ! ! but after castto give them to serve his emas he was well well about him, ing dispose'd ployer, declines giving them. Resort is proposed, by the Bank, moving the Deposites, promises Does the GoWherefore? For the to the Courts, as the final arbiter in the case. vernment accept the proposition? No. reason, I take the liberty of answering, that Andrew Jackson declined to sue out a Scire Facias on the charge same made by violated himself and his " instruments," that the its to rest the charge. CONFESSIONS Bank had There were no grounds upon which charter. In this EXTORTED way are reluctant, though indirect from those assailants of the Bank, that their clamor and abuse are employed for OTHER PURPOSES than those they proclaim. And yet, with a conduct so pal- pably degraded, and a course of proceeding so spotted with infamy, these men have the hardihood to present themselves before the American people, and to ask their support, their confidence, Now and their RESPECT ! ! ! another movement by this crusade army of the Executive, against the Bank. The throats of the office holdthe ers, upon this tack, were strained almost to splitting; for press fulminated clouds of the most appalling aspect. The very welkin was made to ring with the shouts, and to wear, What's the matby the fumes of "the party," a lurid hue ! ter? the unconscious stranger asked And why is all this cla- mor? inquired the unsuspecting farmer, and the busy mechanic who had not watched the movements of these Bank pirates. The answer was given in a tone of thunder "THE BANK IS INTERMEDDLING IN POLITICS!" 120 " " DOWN WITH IT !" was shouted from those same mouths. Down with THE MONSTER !" exclaimed Andrew Jackson. "Uncompromising HOSTILITY to the States !" screamed little Van Buren. " Bank of the United The Bank is intermeddling in Politics !" came hack in and anon the charge rose again, and rolled over the land like waves over the bed of the ocean. The Tyler Committee look into this clamor, and the causes of it. They analyze it, and state that " the way in which such power and influence would be most likely to display itself," would be echoes ; 1st. In the appointment of Directors for the several branches, with reference chiefly to their political sentiments. 2. In an injurious discrimination between persons accommodations to some, and refusing them : to others, granting on party political grounds. 3. In the granting of large and unusual loans, on insufficient or doubtful security, to persons supposed to have political influence ; and extending indulgencies to such, not extended to others. 4. In efforts of direct bribery, by the donation of its money. 5. In rendering the press its stipendiary, by bestowing gra- making to them extravagant loans. and unusual loans, and accommodations to members of Congress, and other public functionaries, on insufficient tuities on editors, or 6. In large security. 7. sition In paying for publications not necessary for a true expoof its condition, or to defend itself against injurious charges. On the first of these heads, the Committee say, they "have no reason to believe that any other motives have operated with the Bank, than those having reference, mainly, to the The object seems to have been, interests of the institution. to place at the board of directors, men of character and stand- ing, acquainted with the circumstances of the citizens composing the community in the midst of which the office was Let this suffice. and of business habits," &c. have felt the directors" must "the keenly government situated, How 121 rebuke arising out of the following quotation from (It refers to the selection of directors friendly to this report. the Bank.) " It would be " if this were not so; strange," say the Committee, commit its [the Bank's] management to the hands of those who were opposed to it, and djr" SOUGHT ITS DESTRUCTION, would be an act of madness and folly, for which it could have neither excuse nor apology. No man of lofty or correct feelings, would assume a guardianship, when he found in his breast, upon self-examination, none other than a feeling of for to placed under his control, and a desire to DESTBOT, of a wish to sustain, and uphold." hostility to the object in place If any man has a vision keen enough to detect in General Jackson's "devised instruments^' though acting as directors of the Bank, any other purpose than to " destroy" it, he sees quicker, and truer, than is usually given to mortals to see. Under the second head, the Committee say: " We have carefully several branches which examined the discount books of the Bank, and the it the purpose of ascertaining the course The to be HOSTILE to the Bank. visited, for pursued towards those who are result of that examination is, KNOWW that many who are known to be hostile to it; and privately, who have co-operated in measures to PESTBOT IT who, in short, are its most uncompromising opponents, are among those who, at some period or another, have received accommodations at the Bank, or some one of its branches. This remark embraces men in pubOC/" publicly lic and private life-, EXECUTIVE, in the LEGISLATIVE as well as de- partments; in high, as well as in subordinate offices." Let this suffice. But let not the reader peruse this decided testimony, demonstrating the Bank's entire political impartiwho may have seduced ality, without holding those traducers, him into a belief that this charge against the Bank was true, And let him bear in mind, how responsible for the deception. widely such a liberal and just policy differs from that proscriptive policy, which, at the same time, distinguishes and disgraces the very party that has the impudence thus falsely to implicate the Guilty itself How common by their own it is Bank charge of in the- would involve the Bank this acts, political partiality. same disgrace the profligate. Debased practice among they make it in the a business to ! seek to involve Jacksonism made a political inothers in a similar disgrace. strument of the government, and conscious that all honest men would hold such conduct in contempt, 16 it became part of 122 duty to implicate the Bank in like conduct ; and thus lessen the weight of that load of infamy upon itself which it was foreseen must, sooner or later, become too intolerable to be its borne. remark upon the remaining heads I shall in my next. ARISTIDES. No. 28. I 27. proceed with the remaining points, as enumerated in No. The next in order is " Unusual loans, on, insufficient security, or unusual indulgencies fo persons supposed to possess enlarged political influence." give the answer of the Committee on this question, I will it embraces it, entire. I do this because it is short, and because it sweeps away thousands of the most inveterate falsehoods which "the party" extracted from this very question, and fastened, like so many blister-plasters, upon the so far as Hear the Committee public credulity. : " The Committee has discovered nothing in the proceedings of the Bank to induce a belief that it has adopted ANT policy of the kind. Each borrower is held to comply with the rules of the Bank. When these rules is followed by a protest, or such other proceed- are violated, the violation ings as are usually adopted in other cases. borrower has failed to renew his note at the vertence, or from circumstances beyond In some instances, where the proper time, either from inad- his control; or has neglected to pay the discount upon each renewal; or has changed his endorser, by suba draft on one stituting one name for another, equally good; or has drawn who declines accepting it, and offers another already accepted by a person, or persons, entirely responsible, the Bank may have failed to have the note protested. In such cases, to protest, would be but a useless proceeding, injurious to the individual, and without benefit to the Bank. It (the Bank) seeks to secure its debt, and if that be done satisfactorily, all is accom- plished which it could desire. "The Committee are not aware of a loan to ANT one possessed of an or, in fact, of ANT enlarged political influence, of an unusual amount, amount resting on insufficient security," &c. Now such as may have permitted themselves to be with the slanders of the official organ of President drugged let 123 Jackson, the Globe, at Washington, whose slang is continued to this hour, reflect a moment, and compare those swarms of wicked and malicious falsehoods which were made to infest the land, as did the frogs, and locusts, and disgusting vermin of Egypt, with this flat and unqualified declaration of the and then ask, if such reckless propagators of cafoul conspirators against the Bank, its officers, such lumny and the currency, ought not t be held up to the indignant rebuke of all honest men, and to the execration and contempt Committee ; It would seem from the complacency with which President Jackson contemplates the calumnies of the Globe, and its aids, that he delights in breathing the atmosphere filled with such a moral pestilence, and, unlike the Pharaoh of Egypt, he cultivates the closest familiarity with those frogs, and locusts, and disgusting political vermin. How humiliating is such an exposition " Efforts of direct The fourth head of the inquiry, viz of the world. ! : donations of its (the Bank's) money." bribery, by Let it be borne in mind, that President Jackson himself made this charge, direct. It originated in his own heart, and formed, out of his own mouth. It was seconded came, and sustained, of course, by full just as was his declaration tols at him, that "it is that said this, his sycophants and followers, when Lawrence spapped his pis- He rascal, Poindexter." His "instruments" were im- damn'd and that was enough. mediately in motion to prove it. The conspiracy exploded, and master and men, all alike stand transfixed by the spear being given to their assertions, by a committee of the Senate, and to their OATHS they cry out against PERtheir OWN witnesses, procured by themselves, of truth, and the lie (J" JURED VILLAINS." What a spectacle ! ! Just so with this charge of bribery against the Bank. Pre- announced it, and intimated that, but for his He special purity, the Bank would have bribed him too had not a doubt but it had bribed Congress Oh, no and whenever a member, a little more honest than some of the Jackson members have proved themselves to be, would give sident Jackson ! a vote according to his oath, and his conscience, (things get' 124 ting now most fearfully out of vogue,) out with a pretty strong implication that Bank" "the Monster !" it comes the Globe was "bribery" Now what says the Committee ? Hear it (/ "NO CASE of this sort is known to the Committee; "the no such case appears (of course where such would appear) on the books of the bank." was not enough. For it had been already, by the Bank, Whitney, charged against touching other matters, that it paid out its money without making any entries at all. But this Well, the committee summon before them the two Govern- Directors, Messrs. Macalister and Ingraham, and put the question "Could any morttey go out of the Bank without ment the same appearing on the books?" do not think it could." Answer " We Now what becomes of President Jackson's favourite and cherished charge against the Bank of " bribery ?" Where shall honest men go to find even the atoms of this broken up and scattered calumny ? No where within the range of truth, or justice, or honour, I answer but even to this hour, the whole may be found, in an embodied form, in President Jackson's keeping, alongside the Poindexter affidavits; and in the ; Globe, and in its affiliated lingers in the presses yet dalous falsehood was invented. The aye, and perhaps it even whom the scan- minds of those, to delude "In rendering the press its (the Bank's) stipendiary, by bestowing gratuitous rewards on editors, or making to 5lh them extravagant loans." The Committee know of no case of gratuity " to any." The Committee go over the old grounds of the Jesper HardWebb and Noah loans, and the loans to Gales ing, and the and Seaton. The Committee take a range from New York to Norfolk, and from, editors in ington, state the loans New made to, and balances due York, Philadelphia, Baltimore, Wash- Richmond, Va. and Norfolk. " Some of these loans (says the Committee) at a period too remote from the present times to be subject to any suspicion of im- were granted propriety, while others to be hostile to the have been obtained by editors known " Loans made to itself." Again Bank 125 have existed from the origin of the Bank." But which of the Presidents, except President Jackson, saw, or even suspected in the Bank, a design to render the press its stipeneditors by it? But men, had so an editor of a newspaper got a note discounted any one of those high minded and honourable far forgot the honour due to his character, and diary, because if by "reof the the editors and otherwise, press; and warding" publicly the this hour into into the as to he forces Globe, forcing press and as his office-holders are compelled by him to force into the Globe's allies, thousands of the public money, he might be supposed dishonourable enough to originate a charge, as has to the nation, as to have, as has President Jackson, General Jackson against the Bank, of bribery of the press, when the Bank, acting in the business of its calling, (which is to loan money, and to judge of the proper amount and of the security,) loans a portion of its funds to editors. As with other things, so with the press. Does General Jackson disgrace the country by appointing in the face of his own published denunciation of the practice, subservient members of Congress to office? Does he, in this way, destroy the independence of that body, as he has, most effectually, the independence of the House of Representatives? He directly charges the Bank with a like interference, and a like purpose, to make Congress subservient to its ends. Does he reward editors and pay them out of the public treasury for their fidelity to cry rest. himself and his measures ? "the bank is It is as old as the times, loosing his Instantly he starts the And so of all the buying up the press." own days of tail in ./Esop, that a trap, set to an old fox of to have work his all the foxes appear in a like disgraceful predicament. The old fox of modern times has had the luck to make a good many silly is, is ones believe that the fashion set by himself, odious as it followed by others, especially by so dignified an institu- tion as the To have appeared a solitaire was more than even the old Roman, or the United States Bank. in this disgrace, hero of three wars, could bear. The public can be at no loss to understand this whole business. If it were cheap, or did not cost the country too much in suffering and in dishonour, 126 the cunning of the scheme might be laughed at. But it is too serious a matter for a joke. The Committee bestow much space in describing the labour and occupy 6th point in order, viz : much " Loans to members of Congress and functionaries of the Government." Here the Committee meet President Jackson and his host of calumniators face to face. And what does the Committee tell them? "The same remark, says the Committee, which was made in regard to editors, is applicable also to members of Congress and other public functionaries loans have been obtained by them of the Bank at every period of its existence. The remark applies to those who now hold executive offices, as to those who now are, or have been, members of Congress, and this without regard to the political predilection of the borrowers." This every honest how let us see man might have expected. But now far President Jackson's charge of bribery is true. If the aggregate sum had been increased, to any considerable amount, then a disingenious mind like his, might have some ground for its suspicions. But if, instead of this, the loans to members of Congress, and public functionaries, are diminished, by a comparison between present and former times, showing a less sum loaned now, than previously, I should like to know if that fact, clearly set forth, ought not shame these bold and reckless calumniators ? us see what the committee bring forth. Let the to cover with Well, let committee speak : 1826, the loans to members of Congress at the Bank and the branches, then in existence, amounted to 237,437 dollars; and in the present year, with the addition, since 1826, of several branches, and "In the year all the number of members of Congress, to 258,227 dollars. of loans during the present year is less by 111,539, (deducting from the loans of 1833 a large loan on stock, and drafts in this office, than an increase in The amount by $69,826, than in 1832; and by $63,971, than in the year 1831; and that there has been a similar declension in comparison with the loans of each of the officers with the exception of one, at which the amount is not extravagantly large, whilst at many others no loans for any amount exist and in 1834. It is proper to remark, that the amount at Philadelphia Washington in the year 1832, over succeeding and preceding years, arises from the fact, that in that year, a loan on stock, amounting to 100,000 dolin 1833,) 127 lars, was granted to one member, now dead, at Philadelphia, Washington, discounts to the amount of 50,000 acceptances, &c. were granted to another." The committee vouch dollars, and that at on Post Office for the correctness of this statement. Now what becomes of the cry of "Bribery Corruption Congress bought by the Bank, &c." I will answer what is become of it. It will rebound, laden with all the disgrace and infamy it was sent forth to heap upon others, and settle, in noisome, and festering, and corroding effects, destined to upon those who sent it forth ; and upon those who gave it cir- History will preserve these men, not in the gums and spices of Egypt, but in the offensive and disgusting materials from the laboratory of their own calumnies. culation. On the seventh and last point, I shall make but a few remarks; referring the reader to my 17th number, he will find there, perhaps, reasons enough why the Bank should publish and circulate documents and speeches for its defence. The committee think the Bank was extravagant. So might a made by desperadoes, of another sort, a He might suppose the inmates, whose mansion. upon family all was at hazard, would have been equally successful in driving back the assailants, by a discharge of ten, instead of looker-on, at an assault a hundred guns in which case, there would, of course, have been saved ninety rounds of powder and ball. But those within, to whom the defence was entrusted, and whose all ; was jeopardy, would, nevertheless, choose to judge in that matter, for themselves. So with the Bank. in The committee would seem counts, or its the Bank acmode and names to desire that President, should disclose the &c. by whose agency counterfeiters were deThe Bank had just as tected and calumnies were exposed. well surrender all its power, and every future attempt to detect and expose either. It is a branch of police. Suppose of the officers, the Mayor of the city, and the High Constables, were to expose to the public their plans for detecting the plunderers of property, and give the names of those they employ to guard the city from the ravages of the incendiary? Would it not be, virtually, surrendering all their power, and giving the 128 city up? Just so with the Bank. It has to contend against a double enemy; and to adapt its operations and expenses to On the one hand, it has to meet these double movements. the calumniator; and on the other the counterfeiter; and then again, to to upon, $4,040 watch the break its incendiaries, in branches! their attempt, In 1832 the Bank had by runs to pay for protecting the Western Branches from the hirewhich "the party" employed to make a run upon, with lings a view to break them ! Upon the point of disclosing the objects of the Bank's expenditure, the President of the Bank has satisfied every man who knows what he averred to the committee his willingness And what was it ? Why, reader, " to verify under to do. of solemnity, in any way agreeable to the commitform any for what the expenditure had not been made;" and "that tee, no portion of it had been made to subsidize any portion of the public press, or to tamper with, or affect the purity of any public functionary." This will silence for ever, among honest and honourable men, all the clamor which has been raised against the Bank on these heads for lives there a man who would not believe Nicholas Biddle on his word? Who then would for a moment question his oath? In my next I shall review the conduct of Governor Wolf, George M. Dallas, Joel B. Sutherland, and others, on this subject; and then, with an appeal to the public, close these essays. ARISTIDES. No. 29. The position occupied by the leaders of the Jackson party one which no high-minded or honourable Pennsylvania, man can contemplate without disgust. "Poor human nature!" Here we have it sunk many degrees below its ordinary conin is with Pennsylvania selected for the theatre on which to exhibit the excess of its degradation. dition 129 Let us tion of now first, and fora Gov. Wolf, stands to his I moment only, contemplate the posiin the relation which he do not mean own party, and to those whom, at the ex- pense of principle, he patronized. He is in rougher hands than mine. His own creatures have clutched him by the throat, and hold, at this moment, the nauseous cup of his own mixing to his lips forcing it upon him till he shall drink it to the very dregs. This is retributive justice, and may be regarded as a specimen of what these Jackson patriots hold in reserve for one another in detail. As deserters from prinfrom and the constitution, ciple, liberty" as men in close alliance with the grossest selfishness, following after the loaves and fishes, in utter recklessness of what may befal their coun- when SUCH men get by the ears, there is no quarter. Like the Kilkenny cats, they never fail to devour one anI have nothing to do with their family quarrels, nor other. try, with the loathing exhibitions they make of each other. is with their leaders, when they acted in concert, My business FOR the Bank, and then AGAINST the Bank. Let us to Gov. Wolf. It is very well known, nor will the most illiterate deny first the truth of the position, that down to 1832, the policy of three cardinal democratic Pennsylvania, was formed of THE BANK; DOMESTIC PROTECTION; INTERNAL IMPROVEMENT." That man who points, viz: and might have attempted, down to that period, and even for some time after, to sever these, would have been denounced as a traitor, tion. not to the State only, but to his party, and to .the naUpon this ground, we find George Wolf. What did he say, so late as his message of December, 1832? cannot omit," he says, " whilst bringing before your notice such measures of national policy, as it is believed Pennsylvania OUGHT to sustain, to take a passing notice of " I one that has excited no ordinary state of feeling," &c. He then adverts to the resolutions which passed both branches of the Pennsylvania Legislature, " with great unanimity," calling upon their Senators and Representatives in Congress to " use their exertions to obtain a renewal of the charter of the 17 130 Bank of the United States." He next speaks of the bill which had passed Congress for that purpose, and of the President's veto; and cannot believe that the same fate awaited every bill that might pass both Houses of Congress on that subject, and then adds: " The Bank of the United States, whatever may be alleged to the It has established a contrary, has CERTAINLY done the country service. circulating medium, in which the people have confidence. It is not denied, I believe, that it has greatly facilitated the operations of the General Government, so far as its pecuniary transactions were concerned; and it is admitted, that it has materially aided individuals in their pecuniary arrange- ments with each other, and especially in the transmission of money to distant parts of the Union. It would (he continues) be a subject of deep regret, therefore, if a too strict adherence to a critical construction of the its expediency, in a moral or should have the effect to prevent a renewal of thus unsettling that which has heretofore been considered constitution, &c., or a too critical analysis of political point of view, 8cc. charter its PART of the established policy of the country." So much for Governor Wolf, and as he had been antecedent as he was in December, 1832, In previous to that period. messages, he advocated the Bank, and urged upon the Legislature its .excellence, and the importance of its continued existence. Now soll. let us take a bird's-eye view of Charles Jared Ingerfind him in the at him in 1831. We Let us look House of Representatives of Pennsylvania,* upon his feet, bolt upright, offering the following resolution: " Resolved, as the sense of this House, (of his own as a member of it,) that the constitution of the United States authorizes, and near a half century's experience sanctions, a Bank of the United States, as necessary and proper to regulate the value of money, and prevent paper currency of an unequal and depreciated value." There is no mistaking this. It is true, it was offered when Governor Wolf was for the Bank; when the Legislature was for the Bank; and when Andrew Jackson was not understood The ground, therefore, felt pretbe altogether against it. ty safe. C. J. Ingersoll never risks any thing except principle. find Let us take a look at Doctor Jesse R. Burden. to We him plump up by the side of Charles Jared Ingersoll, flourishing a resolution in the same Legislature, in these words: "Resolved, That whereas the Bank of the United States has tended, in 131 a great degree, to maintain a sound and uniform currency, to facilitate the financial operations of the Government, to regulate foreign and domestic exchange, and has been conducive to commercial prosperity, the Pennsylvania Legislature recommend a renewal of its charter, under such regulations and restrictions, as to the may deem power of the respective States, as Congress right and proper." On the question on this resolution, it passed 75 to 11. During the same session of the Legislature, but at an earlier period, viz: June, 1832, the following resolution was passed UNANIMOUSLY: "Resolved, That, connected as the prosperity of agriculture and manuis, with the successful financial operations and sound currency of factures the country, we view the speedy rechartering of the Bank of the United States, with such alterations as may secure the rights of the States, if any be necessary, as of (}> VITAL IMPORTANCE TO THE PUBLIC WEL- FARE." Quitting the Legislature, we go to Congress. Let us see stands up there in support of those resolutions, and in favour of a recharter of the Bank of the United States. Fore- who most stands GEORGE M. DALLAS. He was Chairman of the Committee of the Senate, and reported a bill, rechartering the Bank of the United States. The bill reported, he stood it, defending and sustaining it, at every step ; and at last records his vote in its favour. Mr. Wilkins was no less ardent by in supporting the bill, than Mr. Dallas. Through the Senate, the bill finds its way into the House. It goes through that body, and next in the hands of President Jack- and active son, when it was made to share the fate of other bills, since by being VETOED, return to the House, to see by whose special agency the bill was fostered and taken care of there. Foremost we that time, We find, in all the ardour of one anxious to support this branch I must of Pennsylvania policy, JOEL B. SUTHERLAND. of that on the reader of some the to the words, beg possess 9th January, 1832, fell from the lips of this consistent per- Hear him sonage. " There was one point on which he felt bound to put a question to the Honourable gentleman from Georgia. Did that Honourable gentleman mean to assert that the president and directors of the United States Bank, residing in Philadelphia, (men of as lofty character, of as strict honour and respectability, as any set of men in this country, in this House or out of it;) 132 mean did he to say, that these men were influenced to bring this measure forward by Ihe movements of a political party? ment," &c. It was no political move- If there was any one man, in either House of Congress, more ardent than any other in defending the Bank and in advocating its recharter, that man was Joel B. Sutherland. The whole Pennsylvania delegation in Congress, with only a single Even Henry exception, advocated the bill for a recharter. Horn, who "cannot lie," said the Bank was good, and must be preserved. Now then, we have Gov. Wolf, the whole of the Legislature of Pennsylvania, Ingersoll, Burden, and Petrekin, as its leaders. All the Delegation except one, in Congress, with Dallas, Wilkins, Sutherland, and Horn, as leaders, ALL warmly and zea- Bank, and calling loudly sudden they all change lously advocating the On a ter. ! ! for its rechar- ! Like the tide that bears onward the materials when it and back again when it ebbs, so we find the whole of these men, borne by a current of another sort, in the diAll FOR the Bank, as we have seen rectly opposite course. and anon, all, not only against it, but bitter and reproachful enemies real hunters, blood-hounds, in full run after its de- floods, ; struction ! Were there no inducements to this change? Wilkins has got his 18,000 dollars for the first year, and will get his 9000 dollars for each remaining year that he may fill the appoint- ment which he has received as his "reward" for his defection from himself, from principle, and from his country's good and his country's honour. Jesse R. Burden has never been known, even in the affair of the State Loan, to act without inducement; and whether he comes under the denomination of a seeker after office, under General Jackson's promise to "reward his friends," those who know him better than I do, may determine. Mr. Dallas can assign one good reason for his conduct, I be happy to hear and record it. The school in which he was instructed, never taught a conduct so liable to damn the reputation of a citizen for consistency, and to establish a If shall 133 preference of self over a love of country. And if he can show that he has not had the promise of several offices, (although disappointed to this hour,) he will go far towards shaking public opinion touching the motive which prompted him to such mysterious and humiliating conduct; and for myself, I shall be happy to record it. As to Sutherland, his political creed. he has written He in ever-during characters has avowed that he is " a man of principle according to his interest" It would seem that after having made a tool of Governor Wolf, he has used him since pretty much to his own liking. He can command a much ease as a bird can pick from its stem a cherry; and he can drop it as quickly when a riper, or more inviting object strikes his eye. As to Governor Wolf's motives for his conduct, besides securing a' permanence of office for a son at Washington, they Judgeship with as can be resolved into nothing but those which demonstrate his abandonment of the State, and its honours and interests, into the hands of a party, whose object is to surrender all that is Pennsylvanian to him of Kinderhook, and to the rulers of the Or, in other words, as has been said by another, he has condescended to surrender his guardianship of the state, and its interests, and come down from the elevated Albany regency. position of Governor, to hold the candle whilst Buren writes the will of the State Martin Van ! A few words to the men I have thus arraigned at the bar Governor Wolf. For which of the of public opinion. First to benefits conferred by the Bank, as avowed in your Message of December, 1832, as quoted, have you become the enemy " whatever of the Bank ? Is it because the Bank, may be Or alleged to the contrary, has done the country service?" is it because " it has established a in medium, circulating which the people have confidence?" Or because (there being no "denial") "it has greatly facilitated the operations of the General Government?" Or, as "it is admitted," "that it has materially aided individuals in their pecuniary arrangements with each other and especially in the transmission of money to distant parts of the Union?" For which of these confessed 134 and recorded benefits, I ask, is it . that you consented to seize the dagger of your official station, and plunge it in the vitals of this great public and private beneficiary? Or did you thus Either you were honest then, or you eulogise it in derision ? are not honest now; or you are honest now, and were dishonest Do you have exposed, in your You can Sir, you knew they were calumnies. justification take no refuge there. Take, then, the reward of your inconthen. resort to the calumnies I ! your perfidy the pay of the time-serving politician the contempt of all honest men. I will not pursue the men, your co-workers, who are transfixed with the poisoned arrows of their own make. They are, sistency one and all, in On them the same predicament. devolves the and explain to a disand act how could the gusted injured people they parts they have acted, in behalf of the Bank of the United States, and duty to justify their recreant conduct, then turn, as one man, to cut and hack it in pieces These acts may be, for a while, screened from the public ire by the .shield of party and party success but a day will ! arrive, in this world, all that and the when a wasting pestilence will unnerve may now seem to be bold when office seeker, who have united to ; the office holder, carry on this iniquitous war upon the currency, the very life blood of the country, will tremble in the presence of men, who, breathing a higher and purer atmosphere, will dart from their eyes indignant glances of contempt upon all such conduct, and when a patriotic and renovated people will consign to merited disgrace all such time, and party serving men. ARISTIDES. No. 30. have gone, generally, over the field of this Bank controI have found it filled with official and pensioned versy. Like all mercenaries, their labours calumniating enemies. in the cause of their master, have been, in the precise I ratio of the " rewards" promised to them. At this point 135 Some will have it that the supto the the high-handed acts of this party people port given by even in its war on the Bank, and the atrocious plunder of the Post Office Department, is owing to the personal poputhe secret of Jacksonism. lies larity of Andrew This Jackson. exclusively, to the proofs is an error. It is owing, "reward," the competent, but however he has given that he not the virtuous, the intelligent, incompetent, or vicious, or ignorant, those will who will throw feet, shout to his honour, and commend, or his acts. This, and this alone, is the secret "right wrong," of Jacksonism, and of this debasing lure, comes the power of themselves at his Cunning men men versed in human nature, and who know the springs which control it, in its most degraded state, planned this contrivance, and Andrew Jackson was the very man on whom they knew they could rely for the consummation of their debased and debasing schemes. The avenue to his favour is that of the grossest flattery. This is easy to be administered, especially by those who have the honour of his respect and confidence, and any man can secure It is only these by administering a copious dose of flattery. necessary for an intelligent mind to survey the men (with a few, and only a few, exceptions) that are in the service of "the party." the present administration, to perceive at once, the motives It is a that led to their adhesion and their appointment. question with me, whether, if the crusade set on foot against the Bank, had been organized against the Constitution and Liberty, direct, the same men who have been employed to produce the downfal of the former, would not have been just as ready to engage in a It ter. God, I is war a question, did I of extermination against the latI recall this, and before say? body of them would have overthrow the one, as they have been declare, I believe the great been found as ready to active in destroying the other. The only inducement neces" sary to this, would, at this moment, be additional rewards." I copy the following paragraph, from a public journal. It what the charm of Jacksonism consists. It shows illustrates in in what Gen. Jackson's popularity consists. Strip him of this "rewarding" and bribing power, or confine him to a constitu- 136 tional exercise of Executive patronage, and to a decent re- spect for himself, in the use of it, man who would be any where, a and there would not exist, so universally despised. And "rewarding" system alone, that keeps alive, and imaction and power to "the party;" and it is this that opeparts rates upon the SORT of men who surround the person of their it is this Chief, But to and who are heard shouting the paragraphs to him over the country. : "The appointment of Kobert T. Lytle, the Cincinnati Representative in Congress, to the Surveyor Generalship of Ohio, by the President, before his seat in Congress, from which he had been indignantly rejected by his abused constituents, had got fairly cold, affords another striking evi- the last dence of the regard which the President entertains for He to the people. his declared previous to his election, that solemn pledges when such ap- pointments were practised, "corruption would be the order of the day," and he would render members of Congress ineligible to any such appointment during the term for which they were elected, and two years thereafter, by amending the constitution. Yet he does not hesitate to add another to the numerous precedents which his administration has afforded of Executive bribery, or what he declared to be bribery. "Another case, in the appointment of Mr. Kavanagh, to a high diplomatic station, in less time after his seat in Congress became vacated, than it would require for his journey to his constituents. Lytle and Kavanagh were both members of Congress, both were candidates for re-election, both rejected by the people for supporting the corruptions of the administration, and both returned from Congress, with their appointments in their pockets, to show their constituents that when the people would not sustain them, the power of the President would.'" A power like this, and thus prostituted, requires to be overthe come, prevalence of Roman virtue, and the employment Can Patriotism of the opposite and counteracting means. combat successfully if those this who power, or drive back this stream of are influenced by it keep back any corruption, part of the sacrifice required to make its efforts effective? Is it rational to see an evil, and feel its effects, and sit quietly with folded arms, and mourn over, and expect it to retire? Are the key rich in this great contest justifiable in turning the upon their treasures, when money may be required to scatter light the people, and employ the appropriate and meeting driving back the armies of mercenaries that are laying waste the land? power for among 137 It is to the government patronage, prostituted as it is, and the use of the public money, in employing and rewarding officers, and to the calumnies they are, in these ways, paid for that we must look for the secret of the success circulating, of Jacksonism and ; and we may find in our own want of union of action, the secret of the failure of our designs, so far, to save the country. The friends of the constitution have to encounter a fearful They must surrender sectional and personal and forego what they would desire, for what they can obtain, or as certain as their is a sun in the Heavens, all will be lost Thrown by the power forced by the stream responsibility. predilections, ! of corruption from their position, the patriots of the Republic have nothing left but to get footing where they can. The question at present is, not whether Henry Clay, John C. Calhoun, or Daniel Webster, or any other great man, shall be President of the United States, but whether Liberty and shall be, or cease to be. If general Jackson shall suc" ceed, by his system of rewards," in buying up enough of Swiss power to elect his successor, as he has been in sustain- Union ing himself, I would not give a pinch of snuff for our Liberty, our Constitution, or our Union. Success here, and under the circumstances of the case, would amount to a virtual aban- donment of the first, and a dissolution of the last. It would be so, since the evils we endure now, are borne, not because they are not destructive of Liberty, but from the hope that there is enough of virtue in the Republic to save it. This hope once extinct, and the power of General Jackson to entail upon us a successor of his own choice, being clearly shown, there will be an end to the Republic. Let patriots, therefore, in view of this horrible catastrophe, Let them, with the proofs I have given in these essays, of the power of Jacksonism, and of the mode of its operation, unite. when brought to bear on the great monied interests of the country, take the alarm, and with one eye on this war on the Bank, and the other on the rank corruptions of the Post Office Department, and all the departments, resolve, to throw 18 138 of despotism, and restore to the country, its peace, and its hopes. So utterly corrupt has the whole mass of "the Government" back this title honour, its become, that it boasts of it Bribery purchase of votes the exercise of the Federal patronage in state affairs, who As well might it be attempted to deny pretends to deny? ! that night and day succeed each other, or that light manifest. J\o longer able to hide the corruptions on the minions of the government fatten, they are held the party as purity personified. sweet Who bitter. Bitter is makes which up by and called sweet, was more honoured at the late Jefferson dinner in Philadelphia, than Wm. T. Barry, upon whose horrible administration of the Post Office Department, a unani- mous vote of the Senate cast a censure And what awaits him? it ing against ! even Isaac Hill vot- A mission to Spain !! ! Eighteen thousand dollars for one year, and nine thousand dollars a year afterwards, for what ? For carrying out to the letanswer, the scheme of rewarding partisans; and making public money subservient to the perpetuation of Jacksonism. ter, I Well might Mr. Calhoun say that the very demonstration of this corruption went to increase the power of the party. Let any man look this matter full in the face. I have shown him in these essays how see? What this does he profligate party moved upon the Bank. First, by slanders the most then foul, to get rid of an honest and honourable direction to put in tools of their own selecting this failing, calumny was made the great instrument for battering it down men were commissioned to act as "spies" committees were formed to implicate a man was selected to swear away the good of President Biddle, and to impeach the honour of the other officers of the Bank. Every resort was had to break name down the system of currency which has no equal on the face of the earth, because the Bank, tained it, would not bow down which gave it being, and susto, and become the tool of I have proved all this. What next? The Senate a unanimous vote, has demonstrated the corruptions of the by Post Office Department. The records demonstrate the shock- Jacksonism. ing depraVity of the Land Office, and of the Indian Depart- 139 ment. A smell has gone forth ! It sickens every man of ho- Laws are violated the Constinest or honourable feelings Marshals are subservient and a Secretution spurned at. ! tary of the Treasury, for daring to be honest, is kicked out in the face of all the people, and a tool put in his place to do the will of his master. All this, and more, is as visible to all eyes is it the as the sun at noon-day. people do not rise and of this state from them cast Because, 1 answer, they things? of are made the victims calumny! Why Look ple at these charges all sent round to deceive the peo- ! Extract from the President's letter to one of his Secretaries. Deposites must be removed before Congress meets, or the Bank BRIBE enough of the MEMBERS to prevent it." "The will Extract from the Government Press. " Senators Clay and Webster are the feed lawyers of the Bank, and hence their great exertions in its behalf." From the same. " Senator Calhoun instigated the assassination of the President." From the same. " Senator Tipton has valuable kinds on the Wabash, and hence he is trying to get an appropriation to improve the navigation of the latter, with a view to improve the value of the former." Extract from the letter of a Washington correspondent. " Senator Webster gets a fee of $5,000 to aid in passing a the French claims." From bill to off" the same. "Governor Tazewell, of Virginia, pure and immaculate as he dered, has received $50,000 from the United States Bank." From pay is consi- the same. "Representative A. S. Clayton, who was so violent against the Bank, has received an accommodation from that institution, and it has glued his tongue to the roof of his mouth." These, reader, are the sort of things that have been conThis is the stream of poison, and triyed to gull the people. this its quality, that has been kept constantly running from the lips of President Jackson, and from the Globe, his chosen and "rewarded" organ and on ; these, and the like, have the 140 people been taught to rely for intellectual, and moral, and political nourishment. So have been employed against the have exposed them. I defy successful contradiction. From the Woodbury and Hill scheme, to get possession of the Bank, to the Thomas Committee, contriving to destroy it, I have followed the "devised instruments" of the party, and exposed them, and -their degrading and degraded agencies. Aye, and Bank, far as these calumnies 1 I have shown the position of your Wolfs, and your Ingersolls, and your Burdens, and Dallases, and Sutherlands; and what sort of positions do they occupy? Such as must degrade them in the eyes of all and I honourable men, I answer, in the present in all future time. have done my duty faithfully, but feebly. In abler men professing hands, the exposition of this foul conduct, of be honourable, must have shaken "the party" to atoms that is, if corruption be not an overmatch for purity, and to licentiousness for liberty. ARISTIDES, APPENDIX,* ARISTIDES TO THE PUBLIC. PHILADELPHIA, February 20, 1835. The following address appeared in the United States Gazette of this morning: TO THE PUBLIC. PHILADELPHIA, February 19, 1835. My attention was called, a few days since, to two essays in the Pennsylvania Inquirer of the 10th and 12th inst. ; the effusions of a writer who assumes and disgraces the signature of Aristides. They are obviously the production of a false and malignant libeller, venting personal slander, under the pretence of political discussion. With the assistance of the editor* frankly afforded, so far as he conceived his own position allowed, I endeavoured immediately to ascertain the namejof this concealed traducer. He has baffled my efforts, Nothing therefore on pretexts the most shuffling and contemptible. me but to make this statement, from which my is left may appreciate the character of a slanderer, who, to the baseness of anonymous defamation, adds the meanness of evading that responsibility which no honest or honourable man would hesitate to assume. fellow citizens H. D. GILPIN. That the public may judge of the truth and candour of H. D. Gilpin's assertions, Jlristides begs leave to submit the following copies of letters which have passed on the subject: PHILADELPHIA, 14th February, 1835. To the Editor of the Pennsylvania Inquirer. Sir: My notice has been called to two essays, published in the Pennsylvania Inquirer of the 10th and 12th instant, under the signature of Aristides. are obviously to me the productions of a false and malignant liwho, while venting his long-brewed venom, strives to avoid responsibility, by mingling personal slander with political discussion. As you disclaim the authorship in your editorial columns, I demand that They beller, name of a writer, who has thus wantonly assailed my character, shall be communicated to the bearer of this note, Gen. A. M. Prevost. Your obedient servant, H. D. GILPIN. the * To complete this work, the publishers include the correspondence, which the essays, at a certain stage of their progress, gave rise to. pndence under the title of Appendix. They give that corres- 142 Mr. Morris, the Editor of the Inquirer, having communicated the above letter to Aristides, Aristides immediately answered it as follows: PHILADELPHIA, February 15, 1835. To R. Morris, Esq. Dear Sir: I have read and reflected upon the papers you have sent me, namely, a letter from H. D. Gilpin to you, demanding the author of certain essays in the Inquirer, and a copy of your answer. I have been engaged, and yet am, in the discussion of a great public question, involving the conduct of important public functionaries. That conduct I have spoken of freely, but in no instance have I placed it in a which admitted facts, or official documents, would not justify. I have yet to learn that a free exercise of the right of a citizen to examine the conduct of public officers creates a personal responsibility to every individual officer who may find himself incommoded by the exposure. light Such, from the tone of H. D. Gilpin's note, and the channel by which reached you, I take to be the responsibility which he contemplates. it It I must, at present decline. have said in No. 13 of my essays, that "nothing shall turn me aside" from the prosecution of my plan for exposing to the public the calumnies against the Bank. But when the series shall be completed, my position is one, that I be changed, and I shall be willing to waive the ground taken in the part of this letter upon one indispensable condition. I consider the three individuals, namely H. D. Gilpin, J. T. Sullivan, will first and Peter Wager, as jointly referred to in my essays, and so blended to- gether, by the very nature of their own acts, that they cannot be severed, and that it is impossible to decide what cause of offence may have been given to either, separately. It follows that I cannot recognize the separate right of either, to personal satisfaction. If, however, these three persons will sign a paper, pledging themselves, after the conclusion of these essays (which will be within two weeks) jointly to call upon me for the sort of satisfaction which the tone of H. D. Gilpin's note, and the same it was delivered, authorize me to infer he contemplates, hereby authorize you, on the receipt of suck paper, to give up my name. I pledge myself upon the receipt of such a joint invitation, promptly to accept it, and to render satisfaction to each; and in order, to be determin- channel by which I ed by lot. I have the honour to be, With great respect, your ob't serv't. ARISTIDES. the receipt of the foregoing, Mr. Morris sent a copy of it to General Prevost and soon after he received from the General, the following note, On which he communicated, forthwith, to Aristides. Dear Sir: I have carefully read the copy of your correspondent's note, which you put in my hands at 5 o'clock this afternoon. It conveys no answer to the demand of Mr. Gilpin, and my confidence in your own character and sense of justice, leads me to expect such a 143 prompt and explicit communication on the subject of that demand, as a man of honour should give, and can alone consent to receive. I am respectfully yours, A. M. PUEVOST. ROBERT MORRIS, Esq. February 14, 6, P. M., 1835. Aristides then addressed the following note to Mr. Morris. Philadelphia, February 15, 1835. R. MORRIS, Esq. Dear Sir: I will not permit any occurrence to drive me from my purpose of exposing the calumnies against the Bank of the United States. I To do not mean to be shot off, on account of my labours to defend truth and therefore prohibit the annunciation of the name of the writer of " Aristides" to the party " demanding" it, or to any These being finished, you other, until I shall have concluded the essays. justice, at least, yet awhile. have it I my free consent to give up necessary or proper to do so. my name I am to General Prevost, if you deem yours, &c. ARISTIDES. Mr. Morris, after reserving some time for consideration, and availing himself of such counsel as he thought necessary, addressed a letter to General Prevost, of which the following is a copy: Dear Sir: Philadelphia, Feb. 16, 1835. After the receipt of your letter of Saturday, announcing that " Jlristides" (of which I handed you a copy) was unsatisfachad a further interview with that individual. In the course of the same day, I received from him a note, at the close of which he gave his the answer of tory, I free consent to the surrender of his period, provided " I should then think at the expiration of a certain necessary or proper to do so." name, it This answer of course threw upon me the responsibility of deciding in such circumstances, I ought, as the conductor of a public whether, press, to give up the name of my correspondent. It is proper here to say, with him, both before and since your application, he has denied any motive of personal enmity, or any design to go beyond the official character and conduct of public agents and that if I had given that in all my intercourse to his articles a different construction, they should not have been admitted into the columns of the Inquirer, as will be seen on reference to the editofirst essay was introduced. a writer avowing such motives, and discussing a subject manifestly proper for public examination, ought voluntarily to leave his con- rial paragraph with which the Whether cealment, and present himself as a mark as an editor, with or without his consent, I for personal assault; should place him ment, are questions of such delicacy and moment, that I and whether, in that predica- would not decide 144 them, without ample time for reflection, and the aid of the best advice within my reach. They involve the rights and independence of the press, I am bound, as a citizen and a professional man, to protect, so long as they may not interfere with the rights and just demands of others. They involve the sanctity of the relation between editors and both of which correspondents, which being impaired, the press must lose its just influence with the community. To the time thus necessarily devoted to reflection and counsel, you are to attribute the delay of which you complain. That the whole matter might be brought before those whom I deemed it proper to counsel, and wJiose names are at your service, if required, the following queries were propounded to them, by me: " Query 1. Aristides having distinctly averred that in the papers complained of, that tors he meant to speak of the official acts of the Government Direche has not referred to their private character, nor designed to implicate that character beyond what was inseparable from a free investigation of their public conduct, is he bound to authorize the surrender of his is name upon the demand of one of the individuals whose public conduct thus criticised?" " Query 2. Should Mr. Morris give up the name upon a similar applica- tion?" Upon both negative. the points thus submitted, I therefore feel it ing you with the my my friends have answered in the duty, very respectfully to decline furnish- name demanded. The decision of my friends has been given on the ground that the subject of the articles being unquestionably a proper one for public discussion, and the writer having disclaimed allusion to any thing but public and official acts, of which every citizen is free to speak and think as he pleases, he has incurred no personal responsibility to the parties named, and I therefore would do wrong to him, to the community, and to the profession of which I am a member, by any act tending to dislodge him from his position. Very respectfully, ROBERT MORRIS. Upon the foregoing correspondence, Aristides confidently leaves his case with the public. His essays speak, and will continue to speak, for themselves. Their nature cannot be changed, nor their proper effects diminished, by the impotent epithets which H. D. Gilpin has pressed into his service. In conclusion, Aristides begs leave to remark that whether his name shall become known, is to him a matter of perfect indifference. He is finally influenced by no apprehensions of H. D. Gilpin's vengeance. His first impulse on hearing of II. D. Gilpin's application, was to request Mr. Morris to surrender his name immediately. He would do so now, but for one consideration. Bank Director, Believing that his remarks on owe II. their seventy to their intrinsic D. Gilpin's conduct as a and unanswerable truth, 145 he feels no obligation, at this stage of the affair, and IH comiExioif WITH to vent WHAT HAS PASSED, to gratify that individual with an opportunity his own passions, or divert public attention from his own merits by private warfare. ARISTIDES. The foregoing appearing, Mr. Gilpin addressed the following note to the Editor of the U. S. Gazette. To the Editor of the United States Gazette. PHILADELPHIA, 21st Feb. 1835. "Aristides" has mutilated the correspondence published in the Pennsylvania Inquirer of this morning, by suppressing six letters. I an. Sir: nex a complete copy for publication. Very respect'y, your ob't serv't, H. D. GILPIN. No. 1. PHILADELPHIA, 14 February, 1835. To the Editor of the Pennsylvania Inquirer. two essays, published in the PennMy sylvania Inquirer of the 10th and 12th inst, under the signature of ArisSir, notice has been called to tides. are obviously to me the productions of a false and malignant liwho, while venting his long-brewed venom, strives to avoid responsibility, by mingling personal slander with political discussion. As you disclaim the authorship in your editorial columns, I demand that They beller, the name of a writer, who has thus wantonly assailed my character, shall be communicated to the bearer of this note, Gen. A. M. Prevost. Your obedient servant, H. D. GILPIN. No. 2. luauiREB OFFICE, Saturday morning, Feb. 14, 1834.* Sir: Your note of this morning, has just been placed in my hands by Gen. Prevost. I will immediately wait upon the author of the articles alluded to, who will cheerfully and promptly, no doubt, assume all proper I will embrace the earliest opportunity, after an interview with him, of communicating further with your friend, Gen. P. responsibility in this affair. Very respectfully, ROBERT MORRIS. HENBY D. GILPIX, Esq. Error in the original. 19 146 No. 3. IsaumER OFFICE, Feb. 15, 1835. Dear Immediately after you left me this morning, I called upon the author of Aristides; handed him Mr. Gilpin's note, also a copy of my reply to it. At 3 o'clock, he called upon me with the original of the enSir: closed, which I hasten to communicate to you. Very truly, ROBERT MORRIS. Gen. A. M. PBEVOST. No. 4. (COPT:) To PHILADELPHIA, February 15, 1835. R. MOBHIS, Esq. Dear Sir: 1 have read and reflected upon the papers you have sent me, namely, a letter from H. D. Gilpin to you, demanding the author of certain essays in the Inquirer, and a copy of your answer. I have been engaged, and yet am, in the discussion of a great public That question, involving the conduct of important public functionaries. conduct I have spoken of, freely, but in no instance have I placed it in a which admitted facts, or official documents, would not justify. I have yet to learn that a free exercise of the right of a citizen to examine the conduct of public officers creates a personal responsibility to every indi- light who may find himself incommoded by the exposure. Such, from the tone of H. D. Gilpin's note, and the channel by which it reached you, I take to be the responsibility which he contemplates. It is one, that vidual officer I must, at present, decline. I have said in No. 15 of my essays, that "nothing shall turn me aside" from the prosecution of my plan for exposing to the public the calumnies But when the series shall be completed, my position be changed, and I shall be willing to waive the ground taken in the first part of this letter; upon one indispensable condition. I consider the three individuals, namely, H. D. Gilpin, J. T. Sullivan, and Peter Wager, as jointly referred to in my essays, and so blended together, by the very nature of their own acts, that they cannot be severed, and that it is impossible to decide what cause of offence may have been against the Bank. will given to either, separately. It follows that I cannot recognize the separate right of either, to personal satisfaction. If, however, these three persons will sign a paper, pledging themselves, after the conclusion of these essays (which will be within two weeks) jointly to call upon me for the same sort of satisfaction which the tone of H. D. Gilpin's note, and the channel by which it was delivered, authorize me to infer he contemplates, hereby authorize you, on the receipt ofsuch paper, to give up my name. I pledge myself upon the receipt of such a joint invitation, promptly to acI 147 cept by it, and to render satisfaction to each, and in order, to be determined lot. 1 have the honour to be, With great respect, &c- ARISTIDES. You are especially enjoined to Prevost a true copy of it. keep No. this original, and tender to Gen. 5. Dear Sir: I have carefully read the copy of your correspondent's note, which you put in my hands at 5 o'clock this afternoon. It conveys no answer to the demand of Mr. Gilpin, and my confidence in your own character and sense of justice, leads me to expect such a prompt and explicit communication on the subject of that demand, as a man of honour should give and can alone consent to receive. I am respectfully yours, A. M. Feb. 14, Robert Morris, Esq. No. PREVOST, 6, P. M. 1835. 6. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 16, 1835. "Aristides" declines authorizing me to give up his name for the present. I hold the subject under consideration will immediately consult a friend, as to the course it becomes me to pursue under the cir- Dear Sir: cumstances, and inform you of the result of the conference at the earliest opportunity. Very respectfully, ROBERT MORRIS. Gen. A. M. PREVOST. No. 7. PHILADELPHIA, 16th Feb. 1835, 11, A. M. have received your note of this morning, in reply to mine of Saturday evening. Mr. Gilpin specially directs me to say, that he considers the evasive course of your correspondent as pitiftally shuffling as his He still looks to you for his name, and after the delay libels are false. Dear Sir: 1 which has already occurred, cannot reach ponement is me a moment I have a right to expect your answer, which too soon, as on such a subject, protracted post- inadmissible. Respectfully yours, A. M. ROBERT MORRIS, Esq. PREVOST. 148 No. 8. TUESDAY, 17 Feb. 1835, 10, A. M. have waited three entire days for a reply to my just demand on who assumes and disgraces the name of Aristicles. I believe further effort to be vain with this concealed and dishonourable Sir: I your correspondent, slanderer. still I shall, evades my however, wait demand, I shall until four o'clock this afternoon. If lie take such course as the circumstances require. Your ob't serv't. H. D. GILPIN. ROBERT MORRIS, Esq. Editor of the Pennsylvania Inquirer. No. 9. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 17, 1835. Dear Sir: author of " regret that any further delay should occur in relation to the Aristides." I am anxious to act in this affair as becomes my I character as the editor of a public journal, and at the same time, with due consideration for the rights of all parties concerned. Unwilling to trust altogether to my own judgment in a question of considerable delicacy, I 1 two highly respectable gencomplained of, together with the correspondence that has grown out of them, yesterday afternoon, and unable to agree in opinion, called in the counsel of a third person. The three will meet together at ten o'clock this morning, and I will hasten to referred the whole matter to the decision of tlemen of this city. They read the communicate to you their is communicated to me. articles decision, which will also be mine, the moment it Respectfully, ROBERT MORRIS. Gen. PBEVOST. No. 10. PHILADELPHIA, Feb. 17, 1835. After the receipt of your letter of Saturday, announcing that the answer of "Aristides" (of which I handed you a copy) was unsatisfacIn the course of the tory, I had a further interview with that individual. Dear Sir: same day, I received from him a note, at the close of which he gave his name, at the expiration of a certain free consent to the surrender of his " I should then think it necessary or proper to do so." This answer of course threw upon me the responsibility of deciding whether, in such circumstances, I ought, as the conductor of a public It is proper here to say, press, to give up the name of my correspondent. period, provided that in all my intercourse with him, both before and since your application, 149 he has denied any motive of personal enmity, or any design to go beyond and that if I had given official character and conduct of public agents to his articles a different construction, they should not have been admitted into the columns of the Inquirer, as will be seen on reference to the editorial paragraph with which the first essay was introduced. the Whether a writer avowing such motives, and discussing a subject mani- proper for public examination, ought voluntarily to leave his concealment, and present himself as a mark for personal assault; and whether, festly as an editor, with or without his consent, I should place him in that predica- ment, are questions of such delicacy and moment, that I would not decide them, without ample time for reflection, and the aid of the best advice involve the rights and independence of the press, bound, as a citizen and a professional man, to protect, so long as they may not interfere with the rights and just demands of others. They involve the sanctity of the relation between editors and within my reach. both of which I They am correspondents, which being impaired, the press must lose its just influence with the community. To the time thus necessarily devoted to reflection and counsel, you are to attribute the delay of which you complain. That the whole matter might be brought before those whom I deemed it proper to counsel, and whose names are at your service, if required, the following queries were propounded to them, by me: " Query 1 Aristides having distinctly averred that in the papers complained of, he meant to speak of the official acts of the Government Direc. . that tors he has not referred to their private character, nor designed to beyond what was inseparable from a free investi- implicate that character gation of their public conduct, is he bound to authorize the surrender of his name upon the demand of one of the individuals whose public con- duct " is thus criticised?" Query 2. Should Mr. Morris give up the name upon a similar applica- tion?" the points thus submitted, my friends have answered in the therefore feel it my duty, very respectfully to decline furnish- Upon both negative. I ing you with the name demanded. The decision of my friends has been given on the ground that the subject of the articles being unquestionably a proper one for public discussion, and the writer having disclaimed allusion to any thing but public and official acts, (of which every citizen has a right to speak and think as he pleases,) he has incurred no personal responsibility, and I, therefore, would do wrong to him, to the community, and to the profession of which I am a member, by any act tending to alter his position. Very respectfully, ROBERT MORRIS. Gen. A. M. PHEVOST. 150 To the foregoing-, Aristides thus replied: PHILADELPHIA, February 23 % 183 . To R. Sir: I Morris, Esq. Editor of the Pennsylvania Inquirer. find in the United States Gazette of this morning, a further com- munication from H. D. Gilpin, alleging that a certain correspondence, (which appeared in your paper of Saturday last) had been mutilated by me, and professing to give "a complete copy" to the public. On a comparison of H. D. Gilpin's "complete copy" with the correspondence pubby me, as above stated, it will be* seen that his additions consist of lished unimportant notes between him and yourself, with which I had no concern; which throw no light on the question before the public, and several of which grew out of H. D. Gilpin's inability to be calm and patient under a reasonable delay, the cause of which you explain in your letter to five or six General Prevost. It will be seen, too, that my communication in the In- quirer, did not profess to give all the correspondence, but only so much as was necessary to explain the case. Whether I did so, or not, I cheerfully leave to the public to decide. But in H. D. Gilpin's communication of this morning he does promise complete copy' of all the correspondence. Let the public judge of his candor and love of justice, from the fact, that, in his 'complete copy,' my letter to you of the 15th February, (authorizing you freely to give up my 'a you thought it proper and right to do so,) does not appear! That which was published in your paper of Saturday, and which H. D* Gilpin must have seen, and which is indispensable to a right understanding of the case, is SUPPRESSED by H. D. Gilpin, at the very moment when he is professing to lay the whole correspondence before the public, and is charging me with mutilation, because, forsooth, I deemed it of no importance to let the public see how much he fretted and foamed, whilst you name, if letter, were (after the receipt of my letter) deliberating upon a reply; the very cause of which delay, you explain in your letter to Gen. Prevost. I forbear comment upon a fact that speaks for itself; and only ask you, in conclusion, to republish my letter to you of the 15th inst. as referred to. ARISTIDES. Philadelphia, February 15, 1835. To R. MORRIS, Esq. Dear Sir: I will not permit any occurrence to drive me from my purpose of exposing the calumnies against the Bank of the United States. I do not mean to be shot off, on account of name other, until have it my labours to defend truth and therefore prohibit the annunciation of the of the writer of "Aristides," to the party "demanding" it, or to any justice, at least, yet awhile. I shall I have concluded the essays. These being finished, you to give up my name to General Prevost, if you deem my free consent necessary, or proper to do so. I am yours, &c. ARISTIDES. 151 QjfThe Editor of the United States Gazette very kindly essayed to account for Mr. Gilpin's omission of the 15th February, in his "complete copy" of the correspondence, by saying Mr. Gilpin did not, and could not, have known of that letter. But the public saw differently and that the kindness of the Editor of the United States Gazette, or some other feeling , led him astray, since the very paper which Mr. Gilpin asserted to furnish 1 only a mutilated copy of the correspondence, contained that very letter. therefore must have seen it. The publishers have no other object in He this note but to put the matter in its true light. x-